(25.00ml H2SO4)(H2SO4 M) = (22.65ml NaOH)(0.550M) = 0.4983M H2SO4
Balanced equation. H2SO4 + 2NaOH >> Na2SO4 + 2H2O 10 grams NaOH (1mol NaOH/39.998g )(1mol H2SO4/2mol NaOH )(98.086g H2SO4/1molH2SO4 ) = 12.26 grams of H2SO4
Perhaps the acid H2SO4 ( sulfuric acid ) and the base NaOH ( sodium hydroxide )
HClO4 is stronger.
sulfuric acid + sodium hydroxide ---> sodium sulfate + water
(25.00ml H2SO4)(H2SO4 M) = (22.65ml NaOH)(0.550M) = 0.4983M H2SO4
Balanced equation. H2SO4 + 2NaOH >> Na2SO4 + 2H2O 10 grams NaOH (1mol NaOH/39.998g )(1mol H2SO4/2mol NaOH )(98.086g H2SO4/1molH2SO4 ) = 12.26 grams of H2SO4
Perhaps the acid H2SO4 ( sulfuric acid ) and the base NaOH ( sodium hydroxide )
HClO4 is stronger.
sulfuric acid + sodium hydroxide ---> sodium sulfate + water
Vinegar contains acetic acid, which is chemically a 'stronger' acid than carbonic acid. hence making it stronger than carbonic acid.
baking soda is a base while vinegar is an acid
No. NaOH is sodium hydroxide, which is a strong base, not an acid, and is not found in rain. Acid rain is rain that is unusually acidic due to the presence of nitric acid (HNO3) and sulfuric acid (H2SO4). Acid rain is still mostly water.
You can only get your answer in terms of the acid ionization constant, K_a. The K_a of H2SO4 is immeasurably high and the K_a of HSO4- is 1.3x10^-2. The higher the K_a, the stronger the acid. Therefore, H2SO4 is the stronger acid. Just a slight correction to the question, there is no HSO4. It exists as an ion HSO4-
acetic acid is vinegar!
Hydrochloric acid - HCl Sodium Hydroxide - NaOH Hydrobrimoic acid - HBr Potassium Hydroxide - KOH Sulfuric acid - H2SO4
This reaction is:2 NaOH + H2SO4 = Na2SO4 + 2 H2O