No, though the SO4- portion of H2SO4 is.
In ionic compounds, the cation (positive ion) will be listed first, in this case, H2. The anion (negative ion) is next, in this case SO4 (a polyatomic ion)
Yes it is. H2SO4 is sulfuric acid, which is a hydrogen bond.
No. this is an example of ionic bond, not hydrogen bond
hydrogen bond.
No. this is an example of covalent bond, not hydrogen bond
H2SO4 is a compound named as sulphuric acid. Its elements hydrogen, oxygen and sulphur are present on periodic table.
Hydrogen form a covalent bond with carbon.
hydrogen sulfate= H2SO4 is a strong acid
2 sigma bonds & 0 pie bonds (I think not conformed)
There is hydrogen bonding between H2SO4 molecules. Hence it has a associatedstructureand due to this H2SO4 is viscous.
sulphur and hydrogen the molecular formula is H2SO4
It does not
It is the formula for Sulfuric Acid, H2SO4, Hydrogen Sulfate.
Sulphuric Acid
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.
H2so4-
2NaHCO3 + H2SO4 --> Na2SO4 + H2O(l) + CO2(g)
Sulfuric acid cannot act as a Lewis acid as it has no ability to accept a lone pair of electrons from a Lewis base.
In solution in water, H2SO4 spontaneously ionizes to form hydrogen cations, with varying degrees of hydration, and sulfate anions. The sulfate anions are held together by covalent bonds.