An acid always gives up hydrogen ions. Strong acids give them up easier, weak acids don't.
The conjugate base of a weak acid is always a strong base
True
No, acetic acid is always a weak electrolyte.
No, acetic acid is always a weak electrolyte.
An acid always gives up hydrogen ions. Strong acids give them up easier, weak acids don't.
The molarity not depend on weak or strong.
The conjugate base of a weak acid is always a strong base
True
No, acetic acid is always a weak electrolyte.
No, acetic acid is always a weak electrolyte.
True organic acids are weak acids but alpha substituted acids may be strong as 'trichloric acetic acid is a very strong acid.
pH below 7 always is acid, base has pH above 7.
They are pretty much the same. The only difference might be that the weak acid was always weak and the dilute acid used to be stronger and then got watered down, or diluted. But, essentially they can both have the same pH and be called either one.
The formic acid is a weak acid.
H2CO3 Carbonic acid is a weak acid because it does not dissociate completely in solution making it a weak electrolyte.
you create a neutral solution -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Well it depends actually it doesn't always create a neutral solution. Here's the order: Strong Alkali + Strong Acid = Neutralisation (water + salt) Strong Alkali + Weak Acid = Weak Alkali Weak Alkali + Weak Acid = Neutralisation ( water + salt) Weak Alkali + Strong Acid = Weak Acid Strong Alkali + Strong Acid = Neutralisation (water + salt) Hope it helps! :)