No. It is dibasic.
The systematic name for sulphuric acid is sulfuric acid.
Gold does not react with sulphuric acid under normal conditions. Gold is a noble metal and is resistant to corrosion by acids, including sulphuric acid.
Monobasic typically refers to a compound or chemical substance that can donate only one hydrogen ion (proton) per molecule in an acid-base reaction. Monobasic acids, for example, like hydrochloric acid (HCl), can donate one proton in a chemical reaction.
No, sulphuric acid is stronger than sulphurous acid. Sulphuric acid is a strong acid that can fully dissociate in water to release hydrogen ions, while sulphurous acid is a weak acid that only partially dissociates.
Monobasic acids can donate only one proton (H+) per molecule in a reaction, while dibasic acids can donate two protons per molecule. This means that dibasic acids have double the acidic strength compared to monobasic acids.
The valency for sulphuric acid is H2SO4
No, sulphuric acid is not found in vinegar.
No. It is a mixture of sulphuric acid and water.
Fertilisers contain Sulphuric acid.
Yes. Sulphuric acid is british
There are many different concentrations of "concentrated sulphuric acid". It is possible to deduce the concentration of the sulphuric acid by titration.
You can use either the nitric or hydrochloric acid as a replacement of the sulphuric acid.
The chemical formula of sulphuric acid is H2SO4.
Reactant.
Sulphuric these days also spelt as sulfuric
The systematic name for sulphuric acid is sulfuric acid.
Gold does not react with sulphuric acid under normal conditions. Gold is a noble metal and is resistant to corrosion by acids, including sulphuric acid.