The conjugate acid of H2O is H3O+
Its conjugate acid is H3O+
The conjugate acid of F- is HF.
H2o
H2o
The conjugate base for H2O is the hydroxide ion, OH-. When the hydroxide ion reacts with another water molecule, a hydrogen ion may be transferred, resulting in a water molecule and a hydroxide ion. Therefore, the conjugate base of water is OH-
Its conjugate acid is H3O+
The conjugate acid of F- is HF.
H2o
H2o
The conjugate base for H2O is the hydroxide ion, OH-. When the hydroxide ion reacts with another water molecule, a hydrogen ion may be transferred, resulting in a water molecule and a hydroxide ion. Therefore, the conjugate base of water is OH-
In H2O the conjugate base is H2PO4-, being conjugated to the acid H3PO4. As well: H3PO4 is conjugated acid to the base H2PO4-.
This is a Bronsted question. Hs- is the acid in this which makes H2O a base. Therefore S-2 is the conjugate base and the H3O+ hydronium ion is the conjugate acid.
The conjugate base of HF is the fluoride ion F-
OH -I assume.
OH - ? Strangely enough it is water! H2O.
NaOH, or lye. They form NaCl and H2O, or salt and water.
An acid base pair which differ from each other by a single proton(H+ ion) is called a conjugate pair. Eg. Acid Base HCl Cl- NH3 NH4+ H2O H3O+