NaH
No, NaF and NaOH do not form a buffer solution together as a buffer solution requires a weak acid and its conjugate base, or a weak base and its conjugate acid. NaF is the salt of a weak acid (hydrofluoric acid) and a strong base (NaOH), so it does not act as a buffer. NaOH is a strong base and cannot act as a buffer solution by itself.
The conjugate acid of ClO- is HClO. The conjugate acid of HClO is ClO2. The conjugate acid of HCI is H2Cl. The conjugate acid of Cl- is HCl. The conjugate acid of ClO is HClO2.
HNO2 conjugate acid = one more hydrogen conjugate base = one less hydrogen
The conjugate acid of H2O is H3O+ (hydronium ion). When an acid donates a proton, it forms its conjugate base, and when a base accepts a proton, it forms its conjugate acid.
You mean,HCO3 - = bicarbonateH2CO3 = carbonic acid and the conjugate of the above base.
No, NaF and NaOH do not form a buffer solution together as a buffer solution requires a weak acid and its conjugate base, or a weak base and its conjugate acid. NaF is the salt of a weak acid (hydrofluoric acid) and a strong base (NaOH), so it does not act as a buffer. NaOH is a strong base and cannot act as a buffer solution by itself.
The conjugate acid of ClO- is HClO. The conjugate acid of HClO is ClO2. The conjugate acid of HCI is H2Cl. The conjugate acid of Cl- is HCl. The conjugate acid of ClO is HClO2.
HNO2 conjugate acid = one more hydrogen conjugate base = one less hydrogen
The conjugate acid of H2O is H3O+ (hydronium ion). When an acid donates a proton, it forms its conjugate base, and when a base accepts a proton, it forms its conjugate acid.
You mean,HCO3 - = bicarbonateH2CO3 = carbonic acid and the conjugate of the above base.
The conjugate base and conjugate acid for HS04 is: Conjugate acid is H2SO4 Conjugate base is SO42
The conjugate acid of CIO- is HClO. When CIO- gains a proton, it forms HClO as its conjugate acid.
The conjugate acid of the base NH2OH (hydroxlyamine) is NH3OH^+
CIO4- is nothing. The conjugate acid of ClO4- (with a lowercase L) is HClO4, perchloric acid
The conjugate acid of H4N2 is H5N2+ because it gains a proton (H+) to form its conjugate acid.
The conjugate acid of ClO^- is HClO. This is because ClO^- is a base that can accept a proton to form its conjugate acid.
The conjugate acid of LiOH is considered Li+.