MgCO3 (Magnesium Carbonate) is a metal carbonate and reacts with an acid to produce salt + water + CO2. Thus, it is weakly basic.
Normally medicines are not highly acidic or basic. They are mainly weakly acidic or basic substances or salt of weakly acidic or basic substances. Only a few drugs are acidic or basic.The properties of the medicines are depends on the route of administration and target area of the drug.
Ciprofloxacin is a weakly basic compound.
Amphetamines are a weakly basic drug with a pKa of about 9.8
Thiourea is a weakly acidic compound with a pKa value of around 10.5.
No; like most alcohols, it's very very weakly acidic.
A pH level of 9 is considered weakly basic, as it falls above 7 on the pH scale which ranges from 0 to 14. It indicates that the solution is more basic than neutral but still relatively close to being neutral.
No, it is weakly acidic, forming carbonate and bicarbonate salts.
No, it isn't. It's essentially neutral. Some alcohols are weakly acidic... phenol is one of the more acidic ones, and was at one time even called "carbolic acid."
NH5F is a weakly basic compound because it contains the NH2 group, which can accept a proton to form NH3. This makes it slightly basic.
The pH scale goes from 0 - 14, with 7 being neutral; the lower the number, the more acidic the solution.
No, it is weakly acidic, forming carbonate and bicarbonate salts.
P-toluidine is a weakly basic compound due to the presence of an amino group. In solution, it can accept protons to form a positively charged species, making it basic.