Acids can be classified as mineral acids and organic acid.
Mineral acids:
Hydrochloric acid
Sulphuric acid
nitric acid
nitrous acid
phosphoric acid
carbonic acid
Organic acid:
oleic acid
citric acid
palmitic acid
maleic acid
well this may not answer you r question but thak you for vewing it
10 different acids are- # Sulphuric Acid (H2SO4) # Hydrochloric Acid (HCl) # Nitric Acid (HNO3) # Carbonic Acid (H2CO3) # Sulphurous Acid (H2SO3) # Phosphoric Acid (H3PO4) # Acetic Acid (CH3COOH) # Tartaric Acid # Citric Acid (found in lemons, Oranges) # Maleic Acid (found in apples) # Ascorbic Acid
Acid can also be referred to as LSD, fluff, blotter(paper tabs), window pane(Gelatin squares), sunshine, microdots, looney toons, battery acid, and zen. The following was copied from the 'Office of Diversion Control' website. "LSD induces a heightened awareness of sensory input that is accompanied by an enhanced sense of clarity, but reduced ability to control what is experienced. The LSD trip is made up of perceptual and psychic effects. A user may experience the following perceptual effects: visual distortion in the size and shape of objects, movements, color, sound, touch, and the user own body image. The user may report "hearing colors" or "seeing sounds." The psychic effects experienced by the user may include a feelings of obtaining true insight, intensified emotions, sudden and dramatic mood swings, impairment of attention, concentration and motivation, distortion of time, and depersonalization. High doses of LSD can induce a "bad trip" characterized by intense anxiety or panic, confusion, and combative behaviors. After a LSD trip, a user may also experience fatigue, acute anxiety, or depression for 12 to 24 hours." Hope this info is helpful. :) Peace.
acetic acid CH3OOH
hydrocloric acid HCl
sulfuric acid H2SO4
hdroflouric acid HF
hydrobromic acid HBr
HYdroiodic acid HI
There are literally thousands of different acids. It would be impossible to name them all.
acids are hydrocloric acid, alkali is sodium hydroxide
citric acid
Use the rules for writing the names of acids in reverse to write the foemulas for acids.
Butter and lard are composed of saturated fatty acids.
The names of binary acids do not begin with bi. The names of binary acids being with the "hydro" prefix, then the root of the nonmetal element, then they end with "ic".
The names of amino acids end in -ine.Examples: glycine, proline, phenylalanine.Exceptions: aspartic acid, glutamic acid, tryptophan.
Ammonia (NH3) is not an acid, it is a base.
amino acids
Malic acid, formic acid, Aluminum chloride, H3O+
The monomers of protein are amino acids. There are 20 common amino acids. Some of the most common are Alanine, Glycine and Leucine.
Use the rules for writing the names of acids in reverse to write the foemulas for acids.
Butter and lard are composed of saturated fatty acids.
Proteins.
The names of binary acids do not begin with bi. The names of binary acids being with the "hydro" prefix, then the root of the nonmetal element, then they end with "ic".
The names of amino acids end in -ine.Examples: glycine, proline, phenylalanine.Exceptions: aspartic acid, glutamic acid, tryptophan.
Amino acids are the subunits that make up proteins.
Tryptophan is one of the essential amino acids.
glycerol and fatty acids
Ammonia (NH3) is not an acid, it is a base.