No, H2CO3 is considered to be a weak acid. In regards to aqueous solutions where H2O3 would be present, weak acids are determined by ones that dissociates into ions.
Yes it is a compound It is a weak acid which is partially soluble in water
No. HCO3-, the bicarbonate ion is not considered and acid. For most purposes it is considered a base. H2CO3 is carbonic acid.
Yes this is an oxyacid because oxygen is a part of the formula
Yes. It's carbonic acid, a weak acid.
It is an acid known as carbonic acid.
HCO3 is the weaker acid.
You mean,HCO3 - = bicarbonateH2CO3 = carbonic acid and the conjugate of the above base.
The conjugated acid of HCO3- is: H2CO3, carbonic acid.Conjugated pairs of acid and base always differ ONE (1) proton (H+): The acid WITH and the base WITHOUT it.So, on the other hand the conjugated base of HCO3- is: CO32-, carbonate.
It's a salt.
Parent Acid: HCO3 Acid Strength: Weak Parent Base: Unknown
HCO3 is the weaker acid.
You mean,HCO3 - = bicarbonateH2CO3 = carbonic acid and the conjugate of the above base.
The conjugate base of HCO3- (bicarbonate ion) is CO32- (carbonate ion) The conjugate acid of HCO3- (bicarbonate ion) is H2CO3 (carbonic acid)
The conjugated acid of HCO3- is: H2CO3, carbonic acid.Conjugated pairs of acid and base always differ ONE (1) proton (H+): The acid WITH and the base WITHOUT it.So, on the other hand the conjugated base of HCO3- is: CO32-, carbonate.
I think you mean H+ + HCO3- --> H2CO3
Carbonic acid
It's a salt.
Parent Acid: HCO3 Acid Strength: Weak Parent Base: Unknown
H2CO3 is Carbonic Acid or HCO3- is Bicarbonate
HSO3-
H2co3+h2o -> h3o+ + hco3-
Na2CO3 +H2O----->HCO3++OH-HERE HCO3- IS A WEAK ACID AND OH- IS A STRONG BASE