No, a conjugate acid is simply a product of an acid-base reaction. Every base has a conjugate acid.
The formula for conjugated linoleic acid is C18H32O2. Conjugated linoleic acids are a family of at least 28 isomers of linoleic acid. Conjugated linoleic acid (CLA) is a mixture of positional and geometrical isomers of linoleic acid.
If acid is strong then its conjugate base must be weak, if conjugate base is strong it again accept the H+ ions so acid can neither be strong, similarly if base is strong its conjugate acid must be weak.
Example [OH-]acid (!) conjugated with [O2-]baseor else, in water: [H2O]acid (!) conjugated with [OH-]base
Remember that a conjugated acid has one proton H+ more than the (conjugated) base of it.So H2S is conjugated as acidto the base HS- .
PO43-
The formula for conjugated linoleic acid is C18H32O2. Conjugated linoleic acids are a family of at least 28 isomers of linoleic acid. Conjugated linoleic acid (CLA) is a mixture of positional and geometrical isomers of linoleic acid.
If acid is strong then its conjugate base must be weak, if conjugate base is strong it again accept the H+ ions so acid can neither be strong, similarly if base is strong its conjugate acid must be weak.
Example [OH-]acid (!) conjugated with [O2-]baseor else, in water: [H2O]acid (!) conjugated with [OH-]base
Remember that a conjugated acid has one proton H+ more than the (conjugated) base of it.So H2S is conjugated as acidto the base HS- .
Neither, it is a neutral salt (conjugated with the strong acid HCl)
PO43-
Buffers contain both one weak acid and its coupled weak base, that can not react with each other (they are a so-called conjugated system). When you add strong acid it will react with the base part of this buffer, when strong base (hydroxide) is added it will react with the acid.
In H2O the conjugate base is H2PO4-, being conjugated to the acid H3PO4. As well: H3PO4 is conjugated acid to the base H2PO4-.
The one is a weak acid, the other is its conjugated base (sodium salt of - ). There is NO reaction because they are conjugated.
The base formed when an acid loses an H+
The conjugated acid of HCO3- is: H2CO3, carbonic acid.Conjugated pairs of acid and base always differ ONE (1) proton (H+): The acid WITH and the base WITHOUT it.So, on the other hand the conjugated base of HCO3- is: CO32-, carbonate.
9-cis, 11-trans, 13-trans-conjugated linolenic acid