H+ can be either called a hydrogen ion or a proton.
The H+ ion (which in aqueous solutions exists as H3O+) has many roles. Probably the main "role" is in providing a level of acidity/basicity. The higher the concentration of H+, the lower the pH, or the more acidic.
That would be a hydrogen ion.
Added:
The other name is PROTON
An H+ ion is called a hydrogen ion or a hydron. Sometimes it is called a proton, or is identified in its hydrated state as a hydronium ion, H3O+.
H+ could also be noted as H3O+ which is the hydronium ion. H+ and H3O+ are analogous to each other.
The cation H+ is the component of inorganic acids; also water dissociation produce this cation.
A hydrogen ion or a proton
the name is a hydrogen ion
Proton.
A lone proton can also be referred to as a hydrogen ion.
PO43- is the ion called (Ortho)Phosphate. It comes from (Ortho)Phosphoric Acid [H3PO4].
It is H2PO4- ion which is called Di-Hydrogen-Phosphate ion.
The name of the HPO42- ion is hydrogen phosphate.
The answer is Hydrogen Sulfite, because there is only one Hydrogen and its attached to the Sulfite ion.
A hydrogen ion or a proton
A lone proton can also be referred to as a hydrogen ion.
PO43- is the ion called (Ortho)Phosphate. It comes from (Ortho)Phosphoric Acid [H3PO4].
All the Lewis acids accept hydrogen ion or proton from any othercompound having acidic hydrogen.
It is H2PO4- ion which is called Di-Hydrogen-Phosphate ion.
Hydroxide ion (OH-) is typically responsible for making a solution basic. When hydroxide ions are present in water, they combine with hydrogen ions to form water molecules, reducing the concentration of hydrogen ions and increasing the pH of the solution.
H+ can be either called a hydrogen ion or a proton.
The chemical formula of nitric acid is HNO3.
when a water molecule gains an hydrogen ion from another water molecule
Chloride is an ion that is neither an acid nor a base.
Hydrogen is represented by the symbol H because it is the chemical element that has the atomic number 1, meaning it has one proton in its nucleus. When hydrogen loses its single electron, it becomes a hydrogen ion with a charge of +1, denoted as H+.
A hydrogen ion donor is a substance that releases hydrogen ions (H+) when dissolved in water. These substances are acidic in nature and can lower the pH of a solution by increasing the concentration of hydrogen ions. Examples of hydrogen ion donors include acids such as hydrochloric acid (HCl) and acetic acid (CH3COOH).