A compound.
I got this information from Study Island.com
NH3
NH3
Brønsted-Lowry base is a species with the ability to gain, or "accept," a hydrogen cation (proton). NH3 is an example. H2O + NH3 <====> OH− + NH4+ "<====> here indicates reversible arrow"
Ammonia is a base with the chemical formula NH3.
Three different definitions for the same, ordered evolutionary:A base according to:(In all three examples ammonia is the base molecule)Arrhenius will form hydroxide (OH−) ions. Example: NH3 + H2O --> NH4+ + OH-Brønsted is a species with the ability to gain or "accept" a proton, H+, a hydrogen cation. Example: NH3 + H+ --> NH4+Lewis is any species that donates a lone pair of electrons (represented by two dots in the next example: ':' or '..' )Example: +H + :NH3 -->+H..NH3 (which is of coarse the same as NH4+)
Ammonia (NH3) is an example.
NH3
NH3
An example would be NH3
In polar solvents it dissolves.As an example water.
nh3 for base nd zncl2 for acid
nh3 for base nd zncl2 for acid
Brønsted-Lowry base is a species with the ability to gain, or "accept," a hydrogen cation (proton). NH3 is an example. H2O + NH3 <====> OH− + NH4+ "<====> here indicates reversible arrow"
Ammonia is a base with the chemical formula NH3.
Three different definitions for the same, ordered evolutionary:A base according to:(In all three examples ammonia is the base molecule)Arrhenius will form hydroxide (OH−) ions. Example: NH3 + H2O --> NH4+ + OH-Brønsted is a species with the ability to gain or "accept" a proton, H+, a hydrogen cation. Example: NH3 + H+ --> NH4+Lewis is any species that donates a lone pair of electrons (represented by two dots in the next example: ':' or '..' )Example: +H + :NH3 -->+H..NH3 (which is of coarse the same as NH4+)
A simple example is the decomposition of ammonium chloride:NH4Cl---------------------NH3 + HCl
Potassium hydroxide is a base.