remains after an acid has given up a proton
Remains after an acid has given up a proton.
When a base accepts a hydrogen ion from an acid, it forms a conjugate base. This is a species that is the result of the base gaining a proton.
The conjugate acid of CH3 (methane) would be CH5+, which is an unstable species known as a methyl cation.
Yes, when a base gains a proton, it forms its conjugate acid by accepting the proton. The conjugate acid of a base is the species that results after the base gains a proton.
Such a chemical species is called a conjugate base.
Conjugate acid
Remains after an acid has given up a proton.
When a base accepts a hydrogen ion from an acid, it forms a conjugate base. This is a species that is the result of the base gaining a proton.
The conjugate acid of CH3 (methane) would be CH5+, which is an unstable species known as a methyl cation.
Yes, when a base gains a proton, it forms its conjugate acid by accepting the proton. The conjugate acid of a base is the species that results after the base gains a proton.
The species that remains when an acid has lost a proton is called the conjugate base of the acid. It is formed by the acid donating a proton (H+) and becoming negatively charged. The conjugate base has one less proton compared to the original acid.
Such a chemical species is called a conjugate base.
The conjugate acid of ClO- is HClO. The conjugate acid of HClO is ClO2. The conjugate acid of HCI is H2Cl. The conjugate acid of Cl- is HCl. The conjugate acid of ClO is HClO2.
HNO2 conjugate acid = one more hydrogen conjugate base = one less hydrogen
The conjugate acid of H2O is H3O+ (hydronium ion). When an acid donates a proton, it forms its conjugate base, and when a base accepts a proton, it forms its conjugate acid.
You mean,HCO3 - = bicarbonateH2CO3 = carbonic acid and the conjugate of the above base.
The conjugate base and conjugate acid for HS04 is: Conjugate acid is H2SO4 Conjugate base is SO42