The conjugate base of H2PO3- ion is HPO3-2 ion.
The conjugate base of H3PO3 is H2PO3-, which forms when H3PO3 loses a proton.
H2po3 ^-1
H2PO3 is a weak acid. It can donate a proton, making it acidic. It is not considered a base as it does not readily accept protons.
h2po3
mf its wrong theres no - the answer is H4PO4 THATS ALL dont click H4PO4- Respectfully, Xavier
The conjugate base of H3PO3 is H2PO3-, which forms when H3PO3 loses a proton.
H2po3 ^-1
H2PO3 is a weak acid. It can donate a proton, making it acidic. It is not considered a base as it does not readily accept protons.
H3PO3 is a buffer because it consists of a weak acid (phosphorous acid, H3PO3) and its conjugate base (hydrogen phosphite ion, H2PO3^-). This allows it to resist large changes in pH when small amounts of acid or base are added by maintaining the equilibrium between the acid and its conjugate base.
h2po3
mf its wrong theres no - the answer is H4PO4 THATS ALL dont click H4PO4- Respectfully, Xavier
Its conjugate base is SO3-2 ion.
The conjugate base and conjugate acid for HS04 is: Conjugate acid is H2SO4 Conjugate base is SO42
The conjugate base of NH3 is NH2-, formed by removing a proton (H+) from NH3.
The conjugate base for CH3CH2COOH is CH3CH2COO-.
The conjugate base of HSO3- is SO32-.
The conjugate base of H2O is OH-. When H2O loses a proton, it forms the hydroxide ion OH-, which is the conjugate base of water.