Acid donates a hydrogen ion, a proton, to a solution. H +
Miller mixed gases together and added an electrical spark ,why was the spark required?
They donate a hydrogen ion (H+)
An acid donates an H+, and a base accepts an H+. - Apex
An acid donates an H+, and a base donates an OH-.
An acid donates an H+, and a base donates an OH-.
An Arrhenius acid donates H+ ions
An Arrhenius acid donates H+ ions
An acid donates an H+, and a base donates an OH-.
An acid donates an H+, and a base accepts an H+. - Apex
An acid donates an H+ and a base donates an OH
An acid donates an H+, and a base donates an OH-.
An acid donates an H+, and a base donates an OH-.
Because it donates one or (max.) two protons per molecule (H2C2O4) in water to any base or even to water molecules. This is the Bronsted definition of an acid: 'proton donator'.
An Arrhenius acid donates H+ ions
An Arrhenius acid donates H+ ions
Yes an acid is a proton donor....Bases are proton acceptors.
It has a carboxyl group that donates an H+ to a solution
Depending on the type of acid/base (Arrhenius, Bronsted, Lewis), the acid donates protons and a base doesn't but accepts protons, or the base donates OH- and the acid doesn't, or the acid accepts a pair of electrons and the base donates a pair of electrons. They are just different, that's why.
A base can be defined as either a molecule that binds hydrogen ions or a molecule that donates electrons