There wuz no Chloride, lolz
There is no such ion as H2CO3- However, the neutral molecule H2CO3 exists. Its conjugate base is the bicarbonate, or hydrogen carbonate ion: HCO3- The conjugate base of the bicarbonate ion is the carbonate ion: CO32-
The conjugate base of perchloric acid is the ion chlorate (ClO4)-.
Chloride is the conjugate base of hydrochloric acid (HCl), and is commonly found in salts such as sodium chloride (NaCl). In water, chloride ions can act as a weak base by accepting a proton (H+), but they are not considered a strong base like hydroxide ions.
For the nitric acid (HNO3) the conjugate base is the ion (NO3)-.
Cl is the symbol for the chloride ion, which is the conjugate base of hydrochloric acid (HCl). Therefore, Cl is a base.
The conjugate base of HF is the fluoride ion F-
O2 2-O^2-The conjugate base for HS04 is SO42.
Chloride is a negatively charged ion, written as Cl-. It is the conjugate base of hydrochloric acid (HCl) and carries a negative charge due to the extra electron it possesses.
The conjugate base for H2O is the hydroxide ion, OH-. When the hydroxide ion reacts with another water molecule, a hydrogen ion may be transferred, resulting in a water molecule and a hydroxide ion. Therefore, the conjugate base of water is OH-
The conjugate base of HClO3 is ClO3- (chlorate ion), and the conjugate base of H2PO4- is HPO4^2- (hydrogen phosphate ion).
The conjugate base of the H2PO4 ion is the HPO4^2- ion. This is formed when H2PO4 loses a hydrogen ion (H+).
The conjugate base of H3O+ is H2O (water). This is because when H3O+ donates a proton (H+ ion), it forms the conjugate base H2O by losing a hydrogen ion.