HCN - Hydrogen cyanide The conjugate acid of CN- is HCN. HCN stands for hydrogen cyanide. The conjugate acids are a combination of a strong acid and a low base.
Yes and no. HCN is a salt, but it is also a weak acid.
Sodium cyanide is a base/salt that dissociates in water. CN- is a conjugate base of a weak acid so it grabs a proton (in small amounts) from the water molecule to become HCN.
Acid + base conjugate base + conjugate acid
NH2- is the conjugate base of ammonia.
HCN - Hydrogen cyanide The conjugate acid of CN- is HCN. HCN stands for hydrogen cyanide. The conjugate acids are a combination of a strong acid and a low base.
Yes and no. HCN is a salt, but it is also a weak acid.
Sodium cyanide is a base/salt that dissociates in water. CN- is a conjugate base of a weak acid so it grabs a proton (in small amounts) from the water molecule to become HCN.
Acid + base conjugate base + conjugate acid
NH2- is the conjugate base of ammonia.
The conjugate base and conjugate acid for HS04 is: Conjugate acid is H2SO4 Conjugate base is SO42
The conjugate base of water is OH-.
NH3 + H20 <----> NH4+ + OH- Ammonia is a weak base so it is the favored side of the equilbrium. Conjugate acid and base pairs only differ by a proton. So ammonia and ammonium are pairs and water and hydroxide ions are pairs. NH4+ + CN- <-------> HCN + NH3
The conjugate base of H3PO4 is H2PO4.
PO43-
The conjugate base of H2CO3 is HCO3-. Nope, itsHSO3-
The conjugate base is the fluoride ion, F-