Want this question answered?
Bornsted Lowry base is an acid base reaction theory. The ideal came from Johannes Nicolaus Bronsted and Thomas Martin Lowry in 1923. The theory is that acid can lose or donate a proton.
Proton donor and proton acceptor respectively.
A Brønsted-Lowry base accepts H+ ions.
Bronsted-Lowry
A Bronsted-Lowery base accepts H+ ions
Bornsted Lowry base is an acid base reaction theory. The ideal came from Johannes Nicolaus Bronsted and Thomas Martin Lowry in 1923. The theory is that acid can lose or donate a proton.
Proton donor and proton acceptor respectively.
A Brønsted-Lowry base accepts H+ ions.
Bronsted-Lowry
The Bronsted-Lowry theory is that acids and bases are defined by the way they react with each other. Liquid ammonia and acetic acid are examples.
A Bronsted-Lowery base accepts H+ ions
A Bronsted-Lowry law doesn't exist; simply, the theory says that acids can donate hydrogen ions (protons) and bases accept hydrogen ions (protons).
The factors considered in the Bronsted-Lowry theory for acids and bases are the proton (H+) and the hydroxyl anion (OH-). An acid is considered something that donates or generates H+ and a base is considered something that donates or generates OH-
the Bronsted-Lowry theory classifies a substance as an acid if it acts as a proton(H+) donor, and as a base if it acts as a proton acceptor.
JOHANNES WILLEM BERTENS has written: 'LITERARY THEORY: THE BASICS'
Johannes Kepler
Bronsted Base