They could be acids, or bases, or neither.
Substances that form ions when dissolved in water are electrolytes.
A strong electrolyte is an ionic compound which is completely dissociated in dilute solution. It may be an acid, a base or neither. Strong acids are strong electrolytes which produce hydrogen ions in water, and strong bases are strong electrolytes which produce hydroxide ions in water.
B. a strong acid. Strong acids completely dissociate into ions in solution, making them the strongest electrolytes.
No. It is used as an ant-acid. in uther words an alkaline. its is also wildly nowen asbaking soda, bread soda, cooking soda
The strength of an acid is expressed by its Ka value (acid 'equilibrium' constant) or its derivative pKa value ( pKa=-log10[Ka] )The relation with the strength of the conjugate base, (Kb , pKb values) is as follows:Ka * Kb = 1.0*10-14 at 25oCpKa + pKb = 14.00 at 25oC
Arthur K. C. Li has written: 'Fluid, electrolytes, acid-base and nutrition' -- subject(s): Acid-Base Imbalance, Acid-base equilibrium, Body fluids, Electrolytes, Homeostasis, Metabolism, Nutrition, Water-Electrolyte Balance, Water-Electrolyte Imbalance
Substances that form ions when dissolved in water are electrolytes.
A strong electrolyte is an ionic compound which is completely dissociated in dilute solution. It may be an acid, a base or neither. Strong acids are strong electrolytes which produce hydrogen ions in water, and strong bases are strong electrolytes which produce hydroxide ions in water.
Bertil Thalme has written: 'Electrolyte and acid-base balance in fetal and maternal blood' -- subject(s): Acid-base equilibrium, Analysis, Blood, Electrolytes, Fetus, Metabolism
No, a buffer system is made up of a weak acid and its conjugate base or a weak base and its conjugate acid. KCl and NaCl are both strong electrolytes and do not act as a buffer system when combined.
All three can serve as electrolytes, because all dissociate to ions, what carries the current. However, H+ (acid) and OH- (base) are the best quickest current carriers
B. a strong acid. Strong acids completely dissociate into ions in solution, making them the strongest electrolytes.
No. It is used as an ant-acid. in uther words an alkaline. its is also wildly nowen asbaking soda, bread soda, cooking soda
No, electrolytes are not metals. Electrolytes are substances that produce an electrically conducting solution when dissolved in water, while metals are solid elements known for their conductivity of heat and electricity.
The strength of an acid is expressed by its Ka value (acid 'equilibrium' constant) or its derivative pKa value ( pKa=-log10[Ka] )The relation with the strength of the conjugate base, (Kb , pKb values) is as follows:Ka * Kb = 1.0*10-14 at 25oCpKa + pKb = 14.00 at 25oC
John N. Krieger has written: 'Practical fluids and electrolytes' -- subject(s): Acid-Base Imbalance, Acid-base imbalances, Kidney, Physiology, Water-Electrolyte Balance, Water-Electrolyte Imbalance, Water-electrolyte imbalances
It's not so much that as all acid are electrolytes, though most are weak electrolytes.