An electrolyte is said to be concentrated, in a solution which has high concentration of ions. It is said to be dilute in a low concentration of ions solution. The electrolyte is strong, if a high proportion of the solute dissociates to form free ions. The electrolyte is weak, if most of the solute does not dissociate.
I would think you would have to add hydrogen atoms.
Certainly.
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Concentrated means that something occurs a lot in a given volume. For instance, concentrated hydrochloric acid will contain many molecules of hydrochloric acid in a given volume of water. In a typical chemistry scenario, concentration can be applied to acids. This is generally measured in mols per dm3. A high concentration acid will contain lots of molecules, whereas a low concentration one will contain few. This is not to be confused with weak and strong acids however - that is to do with how ionised they are in solution!
it is a non electrolyte C2H5OH is not a base, its an alcohol, ETHYL ALCOHOL so its just an alcohol
A dilute acid is one that is not very concentrated. You can make an acid solution more dilute by adding water. Note that you have to be careful with the terms strong and weak; very strong acids can also be very dilute. Strong and weak characterize the acid's ability to dissociate in an aqueous solution, independent of concentration.
Vinegar is a weak solution of acetic acid.
A weak acid called Carbonic Acid form. Fun Fact: This is the same weak acid that is found in many soft drinks.
Not necessarily. A solution that has a pH of 2 can have a low concentration of a strong acid or a relatively high concentration of a weak acid.
Vinegar is an acid. But it is weak
A weak acid is not fully dissociated. You need to use the Ka to calculate the concentration of H+ for a specified concentration of the acid.
A weak acid is not fully dissociated. You need to use the Ka to calculate the concentration of H+ for a specified concentration of the acid.
no, a dilute acid is any acid, strong or weak, that is in a low concentration. a weak acid ionizes to a small degree in water.
Not necessarily. The pH of a solution depends on the strength of the acid and its concentration. Some acids at the stronger end of weak acids can form a solution with a pH of 1 at a high enough concentration.
No. A weak acid is an acid that only partially dissociates in water. A dilute acid is a solution in which an acid, weak or strong, exists in a low concentration in water.
The weak acid becomes in unionized form
BTB is an acid indicator. by adding carbon dioxide to the solution, it will turn into carbonic acid (a weak acid) turns green in low concentration and yellow in high concentration.
Vinegar is a weak electrolyte because it is a dilute aqueous solution and has a low concentration of ions.More informationAn electrolyte is said to be concentrated when it has a high concentration of ions. The electrolyte is said to be diluted when it has a low concentration of ions.
When the concentration of the weak acid is the same as the concentration of the conjugate base, the pH will be equal to the pKa of the weak acid. This is because from the Henderson Hasselbalch eq:pH = pKa + log [acid]/[conj.base] and when [acid] = [conj.base], the log of 1 = 0 and pH = pKa.
H+ion concentration in the solutions