A basic solution has more OH- ions
A solution with more H3O+ is acidic.
No, H3O+ is an example of a Bronsted-Lowry acid because it can donate a proton. A Bronsted-Lowry base would be a substance that can accept a proton.
The conjugate acid of the base H2O is the hydronium ion (H3O+), which forms when H2O accepts a proton (H+).
In this reaction H3O+ is the conjugate acid. The original acid in this reaction is H3PO4
NH3 is an example of a Lewis base as it can donate a pair of electrons to form a bond with a Lewis acid. Lewis bases are electron pair donors, while Lewis acids are electron pair acceptors.
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.
H3O is a strong acid.
No, H3O+ is an example of a Bronsted-Lowry acid because it can donate a proton. A Bronsted-Lowry base would be a substance that can accept a proton.
The conjugate acid of the base H2O is the hydronium ion (H3O+), which forms when H2O accepts a proton (H+).
In this reaction H3O+ is the conjugate acid. The original acid in this reaction is H3PO4
NH3 is an example of a Lewis base as it can donate a pair of electrons to form a bond with a Lewis acid. Lewis bases are electron pair donors, while Lewis acids are electron pair acceptors.
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.
An acid accepts an electron pair from a base.
CH3OH is a Lewis base.
Lewis acid like Al3+, I2Bronsted-Lowry acids like H3O+But not Bronsted-Lowry bases like OH- or S2- and not Lewis base like NH3 because they can NOT accept an electron pair (octet rule)
Br can act as a Lewis base by donating its lone pair of electrons to form a coordinate covalent bond with a Lewis acid.
In a Lewis acid-base reaction, a Lewis acid (electron pair acceptor) reacts with a Lewis base (electron pair donor) to form a coordination complex. The Lewis acid accepts electron pairs from the Lewis base, resulting in the formation of a coordinate covalent bond between the two species.
The conjugate base of H2SO3 is HSO3- and the conjugate acid is H3O+.