Definitely NOT a STRONG ACID. #However it will act as a weak base when react with an orgsnic acid. to produc the corresponding salt and water. e.g. Methanoic Acid + Ethanol = Ethylmethanoate + water HCOOH + CH3CH2OH HCOOCH2CH3 + H2O
This reaction is:CH3COOCH2CH3 + H2O ↔ CH3COOH + CH3CH2OHThe products are acetic acid and ethanol.
HCOOH (methanoic acid) + CH3CH2OH(ethanol) → HCOOCH2CH3 + H2O
Is CH3CH2OH strong, weak or nonelectrolyte
React either of the following ingredients with KMnO4: CH3CH3, CH3CH2OH
Definitely NOT a STRONG ACID. #However it will act as a weak base when react with an orgsnic acid. to produc the corresponding salt and water. e.g. Methanoic Acid + Ethanol = Ethylmethanoate + water HCOOH + CH3CH2OH HCOOCH2CH3 + H2O
This reaction is:CH3COOCH2CH3 + H2O ↔ CH3COOH + CH3CH2OHThe products are acetic acid and ethanol.
HCOOH (methanoic acid) + CH3CH2OH(ethanol) → HCOOCH2CH3 + H2O
Is CH3CH2OH strong, weak or nonelectrolyte
React either of the following ingredients with KMnO4: CH3CH3, CH3CH2OH
The acid formed when a base gains an H+
No, in most cases it is a hydroxide, so it is base, or an alcohol eg. ethanol: CH3CH2OH, which is neutral. There is even one example of an acid 'ending on OH' known as phenol (C6H5OH), but this is a special caseand only found in combination with benzene rings (aromatic -OH compounds).
An acid can turn into a base if you mix a much stronger base with it! That way the base acid overpowers the acid and makes the acid a base!
Acid + base conjugate base + conjugate acid
It is a base It is a base It is a base
Flour is a base, not an acid.
It is a Base.