Strongest (conjugated) Acid:
hexa-Fluoro-Antimonic Acid (HSbF6 or HF.SbF5), pKa = -25
It is conjugated to the base: SbF6-
Classified as a "Superacid". This acid will donate proton to C2H4 to form a ethane-carbocation. Compare: pKa(HClO4) = -10, HClO4 does not react with ethene.
Acid + base conjugate base + conjugate acid
Example [OH-]acid (!) conjugated with [O2-]baseor else, in water: [H2O]acid (!) conjugated with [OH-]base
The conjugate acid of F- is HF.
It should be immediately and intuitively obvious that the dissociation reaction that strips off the last proton has the weakest conjugate acid and the strongest conjugate base.
HNO2 conjugate acid = one more hydrogen conjugate base = one less hydrogen
Among these NH3 is the weakest base so strongest conjugate acid would be NH4+ ion.
Acid + base conjugate base + conjugate acid
Example [OH-]acid (!) conjugated with [O2-]baseor else, in water: [H2O]acid (!) conjugated with [OH-]base
The conjugate acid of F- is HF.
It should be immediately and intuitively obvious that the dissociation reaction that strips off the last proton has the weakest conjugate acid and the strongest conjugate base.
HNO2 conjugate acid = one more hydrogen conjugate base = one less hydrogen
The conjugate base and conjugate acid for HS04 is: Conjugate acid is H2SO4 Conjugate base is SO42
The conjugate acid is the acetic acid, CH3COOH.
Its conjugate acid is H3O+
The conjugate acid of H2O is H3O+
You mean,HCO3 - = bicarbonateH2CO3 = carbonic acid and the conjugate of the above base.
Conjugate acid