These are acids or salts.
Bronsted-Lowry's BASES are a substance that either contains hydroxide ions OH- or reacts with water to form hydroxide ions.
Most bases taste bitter and give off hydroxide ions. Examples include sodium hydroxide and potassium hydroxide. These strong bases completely ionize to form the metal and hydroxide ions in solution are very corrosive.
a substance that dissolves another to form a solution: Water is a solvent for sugar.
The sbustance is sugar ;D
A large hydrophobic protein.
. False
If a substance can produce hydroxide ions in solution, then that substance can be considered as a base.
No. Water and sodium hydroxide will form a solution, but no reaction occurs.
Bronsted-Lowry's BASES are a substance that either contains hydroxide ions OH- or reacts with water to form hydroxide ions.
In chemistry a base is a substance that is a water-soluble compound capable of reacting with an acid to form a salt and water. An Arrhenius base is a substance that dissociates in aqueous solution to produce hydroxide ions (OH-).
It dissolves easily in water to form ammonium hydroxide solution which can cause irritation and burns.
No Sodium hydroxide solution results -- not sodium chloride.
I am not sure that the word "form" is best used here. Bases add or contribute to an increase in hydroxide ions in solution with water.
KOH is an ionic substance. The bond between the K and the polyatomic ion hydroxide (OH) is formed by the transfer of electrons. In solution ions (charged atoms) will form. The ions facilitate the conduction of electricity.
solution
Water reacts with carbon dioxide in the air to form small amounts of carbonic acid. In a sodium hydroxide solution, this reacts again to form sodium carbonate.
A base will form hydroxide ions in a solution.