H is common in HBr and KOH
NaOH and KOH are both alkalis. The big difference is their solubility in organic solvents and or reactions. Also they are both used in the production of soap
they are both bases. Anything with -OH in their formula is a base
They are both bases. Anything with -OH is a base.
NaOH + KHT = KOH + NaHT
Molarity = moles of solute/Liters of solutionLiters of solution = moles of solute/MolarityLiters NaOH = 3.25 moles NaOH/2.5 M NaOH= 1.30 Liters NaOH=============
NaOH and KOH both are strong alkalis the difference is in their solubilities in organic solvents and organic reactions for example alkyl halides undergo substitution in aq. NaOH but elimination in alcoholic KOH'''KOH (like NaOH) is hygroscopic. Even at high temperatures, solid KOH does not dehydrate readily.Approximately 121 g of KOH will dissolve in 100 mL of water at room temperature (compared with 100 g of NaOH in the same volume).KOH, like NaOH, serves as a source of OH−, a highly nucleophilic anion that attacks polar bonds in both inorganic and organic materials.While KOH and NaOH are both strong bases, potassium is further down on the periodic table than sodium. That gives you valuable information regarding the nature of these elements. A general rule of thumb is that atoms are more reactive going down a column, and are more reactive as you go toward the left of a row.The pKb value of potassium hydroxide is 0.5, while the value for sodium hydroxide is 0.2 (the smaller the value of pKb, the stronger the base). Therefore, NaOH is stronger than KOH. In addition, sodium is less electronegative than potassium, so NaOH is more willing to release the hydroxy group and it is stronger base.Their first ionization energies are different as well: 496kJ/mol for sodium, 419kJ/mol for potassium. The relatively small excess of hydroxide- released by KOH compared with NaOH doesn't seem like it would impart that much added reactivity.In industrial scale, KOH is more expensive than NaOH (depends on concentration of KOH), so NaOH is widely used instead of KOH. But they both shows many similarities.NaOH creates the solids and KOH creates liquid soap.
NaOH and KOH both are strong alkalis the difference is in their solubilities in organic solvents and organic reactions for example alkyl halides undergo substitution in aq. NaOH but elimination in alcoholic KOH'''KOH (like NaOH) is hygroscopic. Even at high temperatures, solid KOH does not dehydrate readily.Approximately 121 g of KOH will dissolve in 100 mL of water at room temperature (compared with 100 g of NaOH in the same volume).KOH, like NaOH, serves as a source of OH−, a highly nucleophilic anion that attacks polar bonds in both inorganic and organic materials.While KOH and NaOH are both strong bases, potassium is further down on the Periodic Table than sodium. That gives you valuable information regarding the nature of these elements. A general rule of thumb is that atoms are more reactive going down a column, and are more reactive as you go toward the left of a row.The pKb value of potassium hydroxide is 0.5, while the value for sodium hydroxide is 0.2 (the smaller the value of pKb, the stronger the base). Therefore, NaOH is stronger than KOH. In addition, sodium is less electronegative than potassium, so NaOH is more willing to release the hydroxy group and it is stronger base.Their first ionization energies are different as well: 496kJ/mol for sodium, 419kJ/mol for potassium. The relatively small excess of hydroxide- released by KOH compared with NaOH doesn't seem like it would impart that much added reactivity.In industrial scale, KOH is more expensive than NaOH (depends on concentration of KOH), so NaOH is widely used instead of KOH. But they both shows many similarities.NaOH creates the solids and KOH creates liquid soap.
They both react with phenol. KOH is actually a slightly stronger base than NaOH. At low concentrations, like less than 0.1M, both NaOH and KOH are essentially 100% dissociated. However, at higher concentrations, a little more of the KOH is dissociated. The point is, both bases will remove virtually all of the H+ from phenol. You received some incorrect information.
NaOH + KHT = KOH + NaHT
Definately, CO2 absorbed by KOH or NaOH. But it require enormously large quantity of KOH or NaOH. KOH is more effective to absorb CO2, because NaOH also absorb water. So I don't think that this is the treatment of global warming.
Molarity = moles of solute/Liters of solutionLiters of solution = moles of solute/MolarityLiters NaOH = 3.25 moles NaOH/2.5 M NaOH= 1.30 Liters NaOH=============
NaOH KOH Ca(OH)2
NaOH, LiOH, KOH. (BaOH, CaOH)
NaOH and KOH both are strong alkalis the difference is in their solubilities in organic solvents and organic reactions for example alkyl halides undergo substitution in aq. NaOH but elimination in alcoholic KOH'''KOH (like NaOH) is hygroscopic. Even at high temperatures, solid KOH does not dehydrate readily.Approximately 121 g of KOH will dissolve in 100 mL of water at room temperature (compared with 100 g of NaOH in the same volume).KOH, like NaOH, serves as a source of OH−, a highly nucleophilic anion that attacks polar bonds in both inorganic and organic materials.While KOH and NaOH are both strong bases, potassium is further down on the periodic table than sodium. That gives you valuable information regarding the nature of these elements. A general rule of thumb is that atoms are more reactive going down a column, and are more reactive as you go toward the left of a row.The pKb value of potassium hydroxide is 0.5, while the value for sodium hydroxide is 0.2 (the smaller the value of pKb, the stronger the base). Therefore, NaOH is stronger than KOH. In addition, sodium is less electronegative than potassium, so NaOH is more willing to release the hydroxy group and it is stronger base.Their first ionization energies are different as well: 496kJ/mol for sodium, 419kJ/mol for potassium. The relatively small excess of hydroxide- released by KOH compared with NaOH doesn't seem like it would impart that much added reactivity.In industrial scale, KOH is more expensive than NaOH (depends on concentration of KOH), so NaOH is widely used instead of KOH. But they both shows many similarities.NaOH creates the solids and KOH creates liquid soap.
NaOH and KOH both are strong alkalis the difference is in their solubilities in organic solvents and organic reactions for example alkyl halides undergo substitution in aq. NaOH but elimination in alcoholic KOH'''KOH (like NaOH) is hygroscopic. Even at high temperatures, solid KOH does not dehydrate readily.Approximately 121 g of KOH will dissolve in 100 mL of water at room temperature (compared with 100 g of NaOH in the same volume).KOH, like NaOH, serves as a source of OH−, a highly nucleophilic anion that attacks polar bonds in both inorganic and organic materials.While KOH and NaOH are both strong bases, potassium is further down on the Periodic Table than sodium. That gives you valuable information regarding the nature of these elements. A general rule of thumb is that atoms are more reactive going down a column, and are more reactive as you go toward the left of a row.The pKb value of potassium hydroxide is 0.5, while the value for sodium hydroxide is 0.2 (the smaller the value of pKb, the stronger the base). Therefore, NaOH is stronger than KOH. In addition, sodium is less electronegative than potassium, so NaOH is more willing to release the hydroxy group and it is stronger base.Their first ionization energies are different as well: 496kJ/mol for sodium, 419kJ/mol for potassium. The relatively small excess of hydroxide- released by KOH compared with NaOH doesn't seem like it would impart that much added reactivity.In industrial scale, KOH is more expensive than NaOH (depends on concentration of KOH), so NaOH is widely used instead of KOH. But they both shows many similarities.NaOH creates the solids and KOH creates liquid soap.
KOH, NaOH, KCl, KBr, NaBr
NaOH and KOH.{sodium hydroxide and pottassium hydroxide}
NaCl, NaOH, NaBr, KBr, KOH
They both react with phenol. KOH is actually a slightly stronger base than NaOH. At low concentrations, like less than 0.1M, both NaOH and KOH are essentially 100% dissociated. However, at higher concentrations, a little more of the KOH is dissociated. The point is, both bases will remove virtually all of the H+ from phenol. You received some incorrect information.
An Alkali is a base which dissolves in water. Its examples are NaOH, KOH.