Sulfuric acid cannot act as a Lewis acid as it has no ability to accept a lone pair of electrons from a Lewis base.
nope. It would only be diprotic if it dissociated to 2H+ and SO32-
Yes. H2SO4 has hydrogen bonding because the H is bonded to the oxygen.
The bond between hydrogen and oxygen is covalent !
No sulfuric acid is DIprotic.
There is hydrogen bonding between H2SO4 molecules. Hence it has a associatedstructureand due to this H2SO4 is viscous.
flourine oxygen and nitrogen forms hydrogen bonding with hydrogen
hydrogen sulfate= H2SO4 is a strong acid
The high B.P. and high viscosity of H2SO4 is due to presence of hydrogen bonding which link its molecules in larger aggregates
nope, there's no hydrogen bonding because the hydrogen is not bonding whit any fluorine, just with the carbon
There is hydrogen bonding between H2SO4 molecules. Hence it has a associatedstructureand due to this H2SO4 is viscous.
flourine oxygen and nitrogen forms hydrogen bonding with hydrogen
hydrogen sulfate= H2SO4 is a strong acid
The high B.P. and high viscosity of H2SO4 is due to presence of hydrogen bonding which link its molecules in larger aggregates
nope, there's no hydrogen bonding because the hydrogen is not bonding whit any fluorine, just with the carbon
The intramolecular hydrogen bonding can be determined by
Hydrogen bonding
sulphur and hydrogen the molecular formula is H2SO4
H2SO4 is a chemical. I think you mean , 'What elements are in H2SO4'. They are Hydrogen (H) Sulphur(S) and Oxygen (O). H2SO4 is Sulphuric Acid. It is a combination of '-- 2 atoms of hydrogen 1 atom of sulphur 4 atoms of oxygen.
Sulphuric Acid
It is the formula for Sulfuric Acid, H2SO4, Hydrogen Sulfate.
H2so4-