Monoprotic: HCl, CH3COOH (acetic acid)
Diprotic: H2SO4, HOOCCOOH (oxalic acid)
Triprotic: H3PO4, C3H4OH(COOH)3(citric acid)
(All acidic protons are bold)
Hydrochloric acid
Ethanoic acid
Acetic acid
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Nitric acid, HNO3. Donates one H+ to solution for every acid molecule.
HCl and HNO3
H2So4
H3po4,h3po3
An acid is a substance that will release hydrogen ions (H+) to water or to bases. A monoprotic acid is an acid that has only one hydrogen ion to release per molecule.
give me the example of tri
The reaction that occurs between a strong monoprotic acid and sodium hydroxide is H++OH- => H2O. This reaction is the same for all strong monoprotic acids and sodium hydroxide so, in theory, they should all have the same standard enthalpy of reaction. In practice, there are very slight differences between acids. If you are in a freshman or sophmore chemistry class, say yes. If you are in physical or analytical chemistry say no.
Example: sulfuric acid fumans.
At 'half way' point the pH is equal to the pKa value of the acid: pH = pKa - log[cA/cB] because at that point cA = cB . So pH = pKa = - log(5.2*10-6) = 5.3
Nitric acid (HNO3)
No. It is monoprotic.
A Monoprotic acid is an acid that only has one hydrogen atom for each acid molecule. For example, hydrochloric acid is a monoprotic acid. It's chemical formula is HCl. Notice, only 1 H. A Diprotic acid has 2 H atoms, such as sulfuric acid, H2SO4.
No, It is a monoprotic weak acid.
No, phosphoric acid is triprotic.
No, permanganic acid (HMnO4) is monoprotic.
Volatile, Monoprotic and Oxidizing acid
No, it is a diprotic acid, the first protolysis is strong, the second is (somewhat) weaker, however also this can be regarded as stong. (miscalculation << 0.3 pH unit)
Yes it is
check the graph on this site, its a typical example of what to expect. http://terpconnect.umd.edu/~toh/models/TitrationDemo.html
monoprotic- an acid that can donate only 1 proton to a base diprotic- an acid that has two ionizable hydrogen atoms in each molecule, such as sulfuric acid
it is a monobasic oxyacid