its tells us the be cool .
It has a carboxyl group that donates an H+ to a solution
its tells us the be cool .
no it doesn't.dissolving or making a solution of an acid makes a more dilute solution of the acid.
No, a bicarbonate solution is basic. Bicarbonate ions are the conjugate base of carbonic acid, which makes the solution basic in nature.
There are a few ways to define an acid: 1- It increases the hydrogen ion (H+) concentration to a solution 2- It donates a proton 3- It accepts an electron pair to form a covalent bond.
H+ than OH- (more hydrogen ions than hydroxide ions). This is what makes acid, acid, and not water, or base, or anything else.
A solution is a liquid which contains two or more substances. I'm not sure the question makes sense. What do you mean, like pouring hydrochloric acid onto a chunk of cobalt? No that wouldn't form a solution...
Excess carbon dioxide in solution reacts with water to form carbonic acid, lowering the pH of the solution. This reaction increases the concentration of hydrogen ions, making the solution more acidic.
No, adding water to an acid solution does not change the number of moles of acid present. The amount of acid molecules remains constant, but the concentration of the acid will decrease as the volume increases.
An aqueous solution of LiC2H3O2 is slightly basic. This is because the acetate ion (C2H3O2−) is the conjugate base of acetic acid, which is a weak acid. The presence of this ion makes the solution slightly basic.
pH of the strong acid solution will be lower than the pH of the weak acid solution due to the stronger dissociation of the strong acid.
A 0.1M solution of NaNO2 is acidic. Sodium nitrite (NaNO2) is a salt composed of a weak acid (nitrous acid) and a strong base (sodium hydroxide). The nitrite ion hydrolyzes in water to produce nitrous acid and hydroxide ions, which makes the solution acidic.