Organic acids:
Inorganic acids:
A few examples are alum, ammonium compounds (except for fertilizer), industrial bleaches (sodium or calcium hypochlorite), chemical catalysts, hydrazine, hydrochloric acid, hydrogen peroxide, inorganic sodium compounds, and sulfuric acid.
Examples: hydrochloric acid, sodium chloride
The inorganic acid with the formula H3PO4 is phosphoric acid.
An inorganic compound is any compound that does not consist of a carbon backbone. Some examples include: NaCl - sodium chloride (table salt) HC2H3O2 - hydrogen acetate, acetic acid (vinegar when ~5% solution by weight) Na2CO3 - sodium carbonate (baking soda)
The simplest is probably ammonia-and-ammonium solution, a very common buffer. Since ammonia is a weak base and ammonium is a weak acid, the two being conjugates and both inorganic, it can be used to form an inorganic buffer. Other examples are harder to find, as almost all inorganic acids are strong like hydrochloric or hydrofluoric acids. Because of some basic chemistry (which takes a textbook to explain) these cannot form buffers.
inorganic. Organic acids end in the formula -COOH like ethanoic (acetic) acid CH3COOH. Inorganic acids begin with H like Hydrochloric HCl Nitric HNO3 Sulphuric H2SO4 This is a convention in writing, but pretty widely used.
inorganic
Some acids are organic, some not. Examples of organic acids that are important in biological systems: amino acids nucleic acids (DNA, RNA) pyruvic acid lactic acid One inorganic acid that is important in biology: phosphoric acid (forming phosphate ions, often referred to as "free phosphate")
Sulfuric acid is an inorganic molecule.
Muriatic acid, which is another name for hydrochloric acid, is considered an inorganic compound. It is a strong mineral acid composed of hydrogen and chlorine and is not derived from living organisms.
H2CO3 is an inorganic compound. It is known as carbonic acid and is formed by the dissolution of carbon dioxide (CO2) in water.
organic