Iodine is a chemical element.
Iodide is the ion I2-.
Barium iodide is neither an acid nor a base. It is a salt composed of a metal (barium) and a nonmetal (iodine).
Potassium iodide is a salt and will dissociate into potassium ions and iodide ions in water, so it is considered a base.
Nal is the chemical formula for sodium iodide, which is a salt. It does not act as an acid or a base in the traditional sense. It dissociates into sodium ions and iodide ions in solution.
ammonium iodide = NH4INH4+ is the conjugate acid of the weak base NH3. It is acidic.I- is the anion of the strong acid, HI. It is neutral.Therefore the solution is acidic with a pH < 7.
hydrogen iodide (HI) is one of the strongest acids
Assuming you are asking about the base I-, the conjugate acid is HI, hydroiodic acid. Since hydroiodic acid is a strong acid, it can be concluded that iodide (I-) is a weak conjugate base.
To make potassium iodide, you would need to first react iodine with potassium hydroxide. This will create potassium iodate, which can then be reduced to potassium iodide using a reducing agent like sulfur dioxide or hydriodic acid.
it's an acidevadu bey neeku cheppadu adi acid ani nee ayya taagi chusu telustadi adi acid o base o
its an acid, when you add hydrogen to things it usually makes acids
AgI is neither a base nor an acid. It is a salt composed of silver cations (Ag+) and iodide anions (I-).
Cul2 is neither an acid nor a base. It is a chemical compound called copper(I) iodide, which is a solid with low solubility in water.
KI or potassium iodide will be basic in solution because it is the product of KOH (a strong base) and HI (a weak acid.)