H2SO4
Sulfuric acid is a strong acid that disassociates almost 100% in solution.
H +
and
HSO4 -
( a further disassociation can take place but that is for college chemistry )
And this disassociation is a strong acid disassociation and an electrolyte.
H2SO3 is a weak electrolyte
Strong acids are strong electrolytes and they're as follows:
HCl
HBr
HI
H2SO4
HClO4
HNO3
It is acidic. it is formed by the reaction of Copper(2) Hydroxide which is a Weak base and Sulfuric Acid which is a strong Acid. A weak base + strong acid always gives an acidic salt.
1.FeSO4 dissociation in water produces more H ions which is acidic. 2.FeSO4 is formed by strong acid and weak base. 3.Sulfuric acid is strong acid and ferric hydroxide is weak base. 4.As the strong acid and weak base combines it results in the formation of acidic salt. H2SO4+Fe(OH)2 gives FeSO4+2H2O
There is no such acid which is both strong and weak. An acid is either weak or it is strong.However, sulfuric acid as a diprotic acid is a strong acid in its first dissociation.H2SO4 --> H+ + HSO4-and is a weak acid in its second dissociationHSO4- --> H+ + SO42-==========================It is a strong acid only for the first hydrogen ion that is produced.(1) H2SO4 --> H+ + HSO4^-The remaining bisulfate ion, HSO4^-, is a weak acid and only partially dissociates.(2) HSO4^- H+ + SO4^2-A misconception is that since sulfuric acid is a strong acid, that it dissociates like this:(3) H2SO4 --> 2H+ + SO4^2-That simply isn't the case except for extremely dilute solutions. As the concentration of the acid decreases, the acid behaves more and more like a strong diporotic acid. At "infinite dilution" it is accurate to write the dissociation as equation (3).Read more: http://wiki.answers.com/Q/Is H2SO4 a strong acid or weak acid#ixzz2TQB85UJp
14For any acid pH always
no as it is a salt of Ca(OH)2 and HNO3 so it is a salt of strong acid and strong base . so it is not basic in my opinion
sulfuric acid is a nonelectrolyte
1.Strong Sector, Strong competitive positioning 2.Strong Sector, Weak competitive positioning 3.Weak Sector, Strong competitive positioning 4.Weak Sector, Weak competitive positioning
H2CO3 is a weak acid--you can tell because there is one less H than O. Strong ternary acids have at least 2 less H than O (for instance, H2SO4, HClO3, HClO4). Strong binary acids are made of halogens, except for weak HF (so they are HCl, HBr, HI).
Sr(OH)2 is considered a strong base
It is Ca(OH)2 , which is a strong alkali.
Yes, it is a strong electrolyte. It produces electricity.
Zn(NO3)2 is zinc nitrate and it is a strong electrolyte.
pH below 7 always is acid, base has pH above 7.
No, Mg(OH)2 is a weak base.
the factors are - 1. the kind of titration ie strong acid -strong base,strong acid -weak base,weak acid-strong base,weakacid -weak base. 2.the endpoint 3. the rate of rxn
Strong bases will almost completely disassociate into their component ions, e.g. NaOH -> Na+ + OH- Weak bases will only disassociate a small amount, so when writing equations, we keep the formula the same. Sr(OH)2, not Sr+2 + 2OH-
A strong base disassociates almost 100% in solution, while a weak base may only disassociates to 2% to 3% in solution.