The strongest base that can exist in water is the hydroxide ion.
The strongest base that can exist in water is the hydroxide ion (OH-).
The strongest base known to exist in the world is lithium hydroxide.
Hg(OH)2, yes, it does exist. Although it must be synthsized as it deosn't exist naturally. Molecules has been isolated (2004) on frozen neon or argon. If you try and make it by adding hydroxide to a solution of Hg2+ what you get is HgO, mercury(II) oxide as a precipitate.
Nitrogen hydroxide does not exist as a stable compound. Nitrogen can form various oxides like nitric oxide (NO) and nitrogen dioxide (NO2), but no stable compound exists that can be identified as "nitrogen hydroxide."
MgOH2 is a base because it contains a hydroxide ion (OH-) which can accept a proton (H+). SOH2 does not exist as a stable compound, but if it did, it would likely still be considered a base due to the presence of the hydroxide ion in it.
The strongest base that can exist in water is the hydroxide ion (OH-).
The strongest base known to exist in the world is lithium hydroxide.
A group hydroxide doesn't exist.
Dragonball AF (AprilFools) does not exist.
A reaction doesn't exist.
Hg(OH)2, yes, it does exist. Although it must be synthsized as it deosn't exist naturally. Molecules has been isolated (2004) on frozen neon or argon. If you try and make it by adding hydroxide to a solution of Hg2+ what you get is HgO, mercury(II) oxide as a precipitate.
The strongest intermolecular forces that would exist between molecules of NO would be dipole-dipole attractions. There are no hydrogen bonds formed, and so dipole-dipole would be the strongest. There will also be dispersion forces, but these are weaker than dipoles.
Yes. To exist or not to exist is basically what he is asking himself in that statement.
Supernatural powers are the works of fictional authors and do not exist.
Nitrogen hydroxide don't exist ! Any formula is an error ! You think probably to ammonium hydroxide NH4OH.
No. No single ion is an electrolyte because they do not exist on their own as substances. However, some electrolytes, called bases, do release hydroxide ions.
Nitrogen hydroxide does not exist as a stable compound. Nitrogen can form various oxides like nitric oxide (NO) and nitrogen dioxide (NO2), but no stable compound exists that can be identified as "nitrogen hydroxide."