Salt water, battery acid, lemon juice, orange juice etc.
KCl is neither an acid or base but a neutral salt.
Lead nitrate is actually Pb(NO3)2 It is a strong electrolyte.
No, KI is a strong electrolyte. All soluble salts are strong electrolytes, and KI is a salt since it is an ionic compound, but not an acid or a base.
<p>No, it wouldn't. HCl is a strong acid, buffers usually consist of a weak acid or weak base in solution with the salt of the weak acid or base. Although apparently it can work for ph 1-1.2, but don't ask me why or how, and the multiple question floating around on this topic (Which of these mixtures CANNOT produce and effective buffer solution...? A) HCl and KCl B) Na2HPO4 and Na3PO4 C) NaHCO3 and Na2CO3 D) NaH2PO4 and Na2CO3 D) NaH2PO4 and Na2HPO4 E) HF and NaF) is definitely asking for HCl and KCl.<p> No, it wouldn't. HCl is a strong acid, buffers usually consist of a weak acid or weak base in solution with the salt of the weak acid or base. Although apparently it can work for ph 1-1.2, but don't ask me why or how, and the multiple question floating around on this topic (Which of these mixtures CANNOT produce and effective buffer solution...? A) HCl and KCl B) Na2HPO4 and Na3PO4 C) NaHCO3 and Na2CO3 D) NaH2PO4 and Na2CO3 D) NaH2PO4 and Na2HPO4 E) HF and NaF) is definitely asking for HCl and KCl.
KCl is an ionic substance (strong intermolecular forces) and CO2 is a non-polar covalent substance (weak intermolecular forces)
Salt water, battery acid, lemon juice, orange juice etc.
KCl is neither an acid or base but a neutral salt.
weak weak
Potassium Chloride (KCl) is an ionic salt of a weak acid and a weak base.
Lead nitrate is actually Pb(NO3)2 It is a strong electrolyte.
it is weak and strong because it neutralises acids. So its strong not weak but weak not strong.
No, KI is a strong electrolyte. All soluble salts are strong electrolytes, and KI is a salt since it is an ionic compound, but not an acid or a base.
<p>No, it wouldn't. HCl is a strong acid, buffers usually consist of a weak acid or weak base in solution with the salt of the weak acid or base. Although apparently it can work for ph 1-1.2, but don't ask me why or how, and the multiple question floating around on this topic (Which of these mixtures CANNOT produce and effective buffer solution...? A) HCl and KCl B) Na2HPO4 and Na3PO4 C) NaHCO3 and Na2CO3 D) NaH2PO4 and Na2CO3 D) NaH2PO4 and Na2HPO4 E) HF and NaF) is definitely asking for HCl and KCl.<p> No, it wouldn't. HCl is a strong acid, buffers usually consist of a weak acid or weak base in solution with the salt of the weak acid or base. Although apparently it can work for ph 1-1.2, but don't ask me why or how, and the multiple question floating around on this topic (Which of these mixtures CANNOT produce and effective buffer solution...? A) HCl and KCl B) Na2HPO4 and Na3PO4 C) NaHCO3 and Na2CO3 D) NaH2PO4 and Na2CO3 D) NaH2PO4 and Na2HPO4 E) HF and NaF) is definitely asking for HCl and KCl.
Salts dissociate because they are already ionized.Acids and weak bases ionize in water.KOH is a strong baseKCl is a saltLiCl is a saltHCl will ionize in water.
weak is not strong
antonym comes from the greek, anti, meaning opposite, so the opposite of weak is strong.