Bases, of course. that negative sign should give it away.
No. Bases don't produce H+ ions. They produce OH- ions. Strong bases produce more OH- bases than weak bases. Strong acids produce more H+ ions than weak acids.
Acids have H+ while bases have OH-
Hydronium (H3O+) for acids and hydroxide (OH-) for bases. Acids: pH less than seven, have a sour taste Bases: pH > 7, slippery, bitter taste
What kind of ions does a base release in a water solution?
hydroxide ions(OH-)
They either have a high concentration of H+ ions (acids) or OH- ions (bases). Strong acids and bases are also highly corrosive relative to weaker more neutral acids/bases.
No. Bases don't produce H+ ions. They produce OH- ions. Strong bases produce more OH- bases than weak bases. Strong acids produce more H+ ions than weak acids.
Acids: H+ and Bases: OH-
Acids have H+ while bases have OH-
No, acids do. Bases produce OH- ions
Acids form hydrogen ions (H+), while bases form hydroxide ions (OH-).
Hydronium (H3O+) for acids and hydroxide (OH-) for bases. Acids: pH less than seven, have a sour taste Bases: pH > 7, slippery, bitter taste
What kind of ions does a base release in a water solution?
hydroxide ions(OH-)
Arhenius believed that acids produce Hydrogen ions in solution and bases produces OH ions in solution.
Acids add H+ ions to a solution. Bases add OH- ions to a solution.
H+ and OH-