A basic solution has more OH- ions
A solution with more H3O+ is acidic.
No, H3O+, the hydronium ion, is an acid.
It is a base
Yes, hydroxonium ions do have an accepted proton. Its conjugate acid is the water molecule.
Its conjugate acid is H3O+
In this reaction H3O+ is the conjugate acid. The original acid in this reaction is H3PO4
You will get a solution of hydrodium ions (H3O+) with the conjugate base of the acid. For instance, you add hydrochloric acid (HCl) to water, you get: HCl + H2O --> H3O+ + Cl-
Br- is a Lewis base.
H3O is a strong acid.
Yes, hydroxonium ions do have an accepted proton. Its conjugate acid is the water molecule.
Its conjugate acid is H3O+
In this reaction H3O+ is the conjugate acid. The original acid in this reaction is H3PO4
You will get a solution of hydrodium ions (H3O+) with the conjugate base of the acid. For instance, you add hydrochloric acid (HCl) to water, you get: HCl + H2O --> H3O+ + Cl-
Br- is a Lewis base.
Lewis acid like Al3+, I2Bronsted-Lowry acids like H3O+But not Bronsted-Lowry bases like OH- or S2- and not Lewis base like NH3 because they can NOT accept an electron pair (octet rule)
NH3
HSO4(-), hydrogen sulfate, is the conjugate base of H2SO4, sulfuric acid.
Sf6 acts as an lewis acid............
Lewis Base Guillermo Correa
Neither, it's a salt.