Monoprotic acids only have one ionizable hydrogen ion, if that's what you mean. Examples include HCl, HF, HC2H3O2.
The strength of an acid depends of the number of hydrogen ions in solution- the stronger the acid the more hydrogen ions there are in solution. Hydrogen ions in solution carry current, therefore the more hydrogen ions in the solution the more current there will be carried through solution.
Acid has Hydrogen Ions..it mostly forms when H2O is broken down into H+( hydrogen ions) and OH(Hydroxyl)
It dissociates completely into ions
this is because it has h+ ions (hydrogen ions) which makes it an acid
Acid.
the number of hydrogen ions (charges) given by the acid will be the same as the anions
The strength of an acid depends of the number of hydrogen ions in solution- the stronger the acid the more hydrogen ions there are in solution. Hydrogen ions in solution carry current, therefore the more hydrogen ions in the solution the more current there will be carried through solution.
# of hydrogen ions in an acid is equal to the charge of the ion
An acid.
# of hydrogen ions in an acid is equal to the charge of the ion
hydrogen
Acid has Hydrogen Ions..it mostly forms when H2O is broken down into H+( hydrogen ions) and OH(Hydroxyl)
It dissociates completely into ions
this is because it has h+ ions (hydrogen ions) which makes it an acid
Acid.
A weak acid is one where the acid only liberates a little number of hydrogen ions (H+) in water. Therefore, they are weak electrolytes. Compare this to a strong acid, which liberates a lot more hydrogen ions when dissolved in water.
an acid has more hydrogen ions than water.