HCL is the conjugate acid pair of Cl.
And Cl is the conjugate base pair of HCl.
An acid base pair which differ from each other by a single proton(H+ ion) is called a conjugate pair. Eg. Acid Base HCl Cl- NH3 NH4+ H2O H3O+
The conjugate base and conjugate acid for HS04 is: Conjugate acid is H2SO4 Conjugate base is SO42
For the nitric acid (HNO3) the conjugate base is the ion (NO3)-.
No
The anion of Lowery-Bronsted acid acts as the conjugate base in this case, for example the conjugate base of HCl is Cl anion.
An acid base pair which differ from each other by a single proton(H+ ion) is called a conjugate pair. Eg. Acid Base HCl Cl- NH3 NH4+ H2O H3O+
An acid base pair which differ from each other by a single proton(H+ ion) is called a conjugate pair. Eg. Acid Base HCl Cl- NH3 NH4+ H2O H3O+
The conjugate base and conjugate acid for HS04 is: Conjugate acid is H2SO4 Conjugate base is SO42
For the nitric acid (HNO3) the conjugate base is the ion (NO3)-.
No
The anion of Lowery-Bronsted acid acts as the conjugate base in this case, for example the conjugate base of HCl is Cl anion.
The presence of a proton.
If you are referring to conjugate acids and bases, a conjugate acid is an acid that can donate a H+ in order to form a conjugate base. For example, HCl can donate it's H+ and create the conjugate base Cl-. On the other hand, a conjugate base would just be the opposite where chloride could add a hydrogen in order to create the conjugate acid.
a proton
the conjugate acid/base of an acid-base pair
true
Acetic acid / acetate water / hydroxide ammonium / ammonia