No, N2H4 (hydrazine) is a base.
N2H4 is called hydrazine. It is also called diamine.
N2H4 is commonly called hydrazine, but it could also be named dinitrogen tetrahydride.
n2h4
N2H4 + 2H2O2 -> N2 + 4H2O 1.5 moles N2H4 (4 mole H2O/1 mole N2H4) = 6.0 moles water produced
3N2H4 --> 4NH3 + N2 is the correctly balanced equation.
Among these NH3 is the weakest base so strongest conjugate acid would be NH4+ ion.
N2H4 is called hydrazine. It is also called diamine.
N2H4 is called hydrazine. It is also called diamine.
N2H4 is commonly called hydrazine, but it could also be named dinitrogen tetrahydride.
n2h4
N2H4 + 2H2O2 -> N2 + 4H2O 1.5 moles N2H4 (4 mole H2O/1 mole N2H4) = 6.0 moles water produced
LINEAR
The balanced reaction for N2H4 + H2O2 --> N2 + H2O is N2H4 + 2H2O2 --> N2 + 4H2O
Nh2
The water suffix "ide" represents compounds where one of the elements is hydrogen and the other is a nonmetal or a metalloid. Examples include hydrochloric acid (HCl) and hydrazine (N2H4).
3N2H4 --> 4NH3 + N2 is the correctly balanced equation.
The traditional name is hydrazine and the systematic name according to IUPAC is diazane.