The weak base is not complete dissociated in water solution.
any thing with a pH below 7 is an acid and anything with a pH above 7 is a base. So a weak base would be around 8
It is the product of a strong acid and a weak base, but is itself a mildly acidic salt.
CoCO3 (Cobalt II carbonate) would be a weak base.
In order to have an effective buffer, one needs to have a weak acid or a weak base, and the salt (conjugate) of that weak acid or weak base. Examples would be :weak acid/conjugate base: acetic acid/sodium acetateweak base/conjugate acid: ammonia/ammonium chloride
If you are titrating a base, using a weak acid as titrant would lead to the formation of a buffer as you added the weak acid. The weak acid would react with the base to form the salt of the weak acid + water, and this would buffer any changes in pH, thus making the titration meaningless.
Ammonia is a weak base
Ethanol is a weak base.
No, a weak acid is a weak electrolyte Strong electrolytes - strong acids, bases, salts, and ionic compounds
A weak base is a type of base. This type of base is considered weak because when it is put in an aqueous solution, it cannot ionize.
NaHCO3 is a weak base, with a conjugate acid of H2CO3+.
No, methanol is not considered a weak base. It is actually a weak acid.
HCOO- is the conjugate base of formic acid (HCOOH) which is a weak acid. Therefore, HCOO- is a weak base.