Possibly nothing, depending on which definition of "acid" you use. All Bronsted-Lowry acids must contain hydrogen, but many BL bases do as well, so that's not necessarily as useful as might be hoped.
Use the rules for writing the names of acids in reverse to write the foemulas for acids.
True
The most causes of chemical weathering is oxygen,water,and acids.
Now this system is the most used; for chemical data bases the Hill system is more common.
maybe o.o
Common salt (Sodium Chloride) has the formula NaCl.
There are many acids with many different chemical formulas. Here are a few common ones: Sulfuric acid: H2SO4 Acetic acid: CH3CO2 Carbonic acid: H2CO3 Hydrochloric acid: HCl Oxalic acid: H2C2O4 Nitric acid: HNO3
A couple of definitions of acids:1. a substance which forms H+ ions in solution2. a proton donor some chemical formulas for acids- H2SO4 sulfuric acid- HCl hydrochloric acid- HNO3 nitric acidSee the Related Questions to the left for more information and other examples.
chemical.
Use the rules for writing the names of acids in reverse to write the foemulas for acids.
No, elements are the makeups of chemical formulas. No, elements are the makeups of chemical formulas.
Chemical Formulas
the acids chemical reaction for hair dying is that your hair will blow up!
True
The most causes of chemical weathering is oxygen,water,and acids.
All chemical formulas are called chemical notations. They represent the elements and the number of atoms of each element present in a compound.
No, acids cause chemical weathering.