Want this question answered?
Yes: hydrogen carbonate is a stronger acid, and therefore a weaker base, than carbonate.
The weaker the acid, the stronger the conjugate base and vice versa
baking soda is the weaker one
They are both strong acids/weak bases however Br is the stronger acid and by that definition the weaker base.
aniline is weaker base because it is stabilized by resonance leaving less negative charge to hold the proton.
Acetamide is a much weaker base compared to methylamine. This is due to the electron withdrawing effect of the CO group, which makes the lone pair of electrons on the nitrogen atom less available for protonation.
Proton-Transfer: reactions favor the production of the weaker acid and weaker base.
Yes: hydrogen carbonate is a stronger acid, and therefore a weaker base, than carbonate.
No, water is weaker than it.
The weaker the acid, the stronger the conjugate base and vice versa
Since tha pka of the aniline ion is equal to 4.6, the anilinium ion is a stronger acid than the methylaminium ion, and aniline (c6h5nh2) is a weaker base than methylamine (ch3nh2).
A base percentage is the percentage that a number is being compared to. It is a base in the sense that it does not change.
baking soda is the weaker one
They are both strong acids/weak bases however Br is the stronger acid and by that definition the weaker base.
aniline is weaker base because it is stabilized by resonance leaving less negative charge to hold the proton.
A-T base pairs have 2 hydrogen bonds and G-C base pairs have 3 hydrogen bonds. Therefore, A-T base pairs are weaker than G-C base pairs.
If you compared a potato with a lemon they wouldn't be much alike so it is probably a base.