Ammonium hydroxide is a base
No, it isn't, NH3 in water is NH3.H2O or NH4OH, it is an alkali, not an acid.
Nf + nh4oh ------------> nh4f + hoh
It is a base because it is part of common household cleaning products.
HCl + NH4OH -> H2O + NH4Cl
Ammonium hydroxide is a base
No, it isn't, NH3 in water is NH3.H2O or NH4OH, it is an alkali, not an acid.
I guess it is called as NH4OH
Nf + nh4oh ------------> nh4f + hoh
It is a base because it is part of common household cleaning products.
HCl + NH4OH -> H2O + NH4Cl
Ammonium hydroxide (NH4OH) is a base. The cation (NH4)+ is low acidic.
The result of a reaction with acetic acid and CH3NH2 is a product known as N-methylethanamide. This only happens if a high enough temperature is used, otherwise a reaction may not occur at all.
The equation is NH4OH + HBr -> NH4Br + H2O.
A base. It forms ammonium hydroxide, NH4OH, which is a weak base.
NH4I + H2O --> NH4OH + H+ + I-HI being a strong acid, remains almost wholly ionised as H+ & I- ionNH4OH being a weak base so you have some more H+ left therefore it is acidic solution. (problem: NH4OH is not an exsisting compound, most of it will react with the strong acid H+ and the remainig will be fully ionized into NH4+)Added:(problem solved: not using NH4OH as it is annon-exsisting compound)NH4I will completely dissolve in ammonium and iodide ions:NH4I --> I- + NH4+of which I- is neutral and NH4+ is quite a weak acid (pKa = 9.25). (The molar standard solution of NH4I will have pH approx. 4.6)
Yes. NH4OH + HNO3 = H2O + NH4NO3