'Monochloro acid' is not a correct compound name.
(In other combinations the prefix 'monochloro-' is possible but not specially to acids, eg. monochlorobenzene)
Here are the possible 'Chloro' acids (increasing oxidation state: -1, +1, 3, 5, 7) of which 2. and 3. are weak acids, the others are strong.
The pH will depend on the concentration of the acid, not on whether it is strong or weak.
The pH will depend on the concentration of the acid, not on whether it is strong or weak.
Strong acid is an expression in relation with the chemical properties of the acid and is used also in physical chemistry; dilute is a term only in relation with the concentration of the acid. Consequently strong acid and concentrated acid are not synonyms and a strong acid can be diluted.
Hypochlorous acid is a weak acid. It is a fairly weak acid compared to strong acids like hydrochloric acid.
One can determine whether a substance is a strong or weak acid by looking at its ability to fully dissociate in water. Strong acids completely dissociate into ions in water, while weak acids only partially dissociate. This can be measured by looking at the pH level of the solution - strong acids have a lower pH than weak acids.
NaHCO3 is a weak base, with a conjugate acid of H2CO3+.
It is a weak acid
Hypochlorous acid is a weak acid.
A strong acid dissociates more completely than a weak acid.
When weak acids react with strong acids, the strong acid will donate a proton to the weak acid, resulting in the weak acid being protonated. This protonation increases the concentration of the weak acid cation. The conjugate base of the weak acid is formed as a result.
HSO4- is a weak acid. It is the conjugate base of sulfuric acid (H2SO4), which is a strong acid. However, HSO4- itself is a weak acid and partially dissociates in water.
i thing strong acid