Yes. HNO3 is a strong acid and therefore a strong electrolyte.
Nitric Acid
there exist no acid as HNO. but HNO2 is nitrous acid and HNO3 is nitricacid.Actually this acid is called Hyponitrous acid (because the original formula is H2N2O2, but all the 2's cancel).
NO3-
There must be HNO because by this way valencies of nitrogen and oxygen become satisfied, H-N=O
Not legally.
Zn(NO3)2 is zinc nitrate and it is a strong electrolyte.
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The oxidation number for hydrogen is usually +1, for nitrogen it is +5, and for oxygen it is typically -2. So in HNO, the oxidation numbers would be +1 for hydrogen, +5 for nitrogen, and -2 for oxygen.
No, ( \text{SO}{3} ) cannot be an electrolyte because it remains as a neutral molecule in solution and does not ionize into ions. Electrolytes are substances that dissociate into ions in solution to conduct electricity, and since ( \text{SO}{3} ) does not do this, it is not considered an electrolyte.
The electrolyte is usually 1.835 times heavier than water.
When sodium hypochlorite (NaOCl) is mixed with nitric acid (HNO₃), a chemical reaction occurs that produces chlorine gas (Cl₂), which is toxic and can be hazardous. The reaction can be represented by the equation: 3 NaOCl + 6 HNO₃ → 3 NaNO₃ + 3 Cl₂ + 3 H₂O. This reaction is highly exothermic and can pose safety risks, so it should be avoided in uncontrolled environments. Always handle such chemicals with caution and appropriate safety measures.
This is the chemical formula of nitroxyl.