Nitric acid (HNO3)
A monoprotic acid is an acid that can donate only one proton (hydrogen ion) per molecule in a chemical reaction. For example, hydrochloric acid (HCl) is a monoprotic acid because it can donate one proton.
A monoprotic base is a molecule that has one functional group that can accept a proton. NaOH for example is a (strong) monoprotic base because it can accept one proton. But amines can also be monoprotic bases.
H3PO2 is monoprotic because it has one ionizable hydrogen atom. When it dissociates in solution, it releases one H+ ion.
Yes, HClO4 is a monoprotic acid because it can donate only one proton (H+ ion) in a chemical reaction.
No, not all monoprotic acids are strong acids. Strong acids completely dissociate in water to produce H+ ions, while weak acids only partially dissociate. Examples of strong monoprotic acids include hydrochloric acid (HCl) and sulfuric acid (H2SO4), while examples of weak monoprotic acids include acetic acid (CH3COOH) and citric acid (C6H8O7).
A monoprotic acid is an acid that can donate only one proton (hydrogen ion) per molecule in a chemical reaction. For example, hydrochloric acid (HCl) is a monoprotic acid because it can donate one proton.
A monoprotic base is a molecule that has one functional group that can accept a proton. NaOH for example is a (strong) monoprotic base because it can accept one proton. But amines can also be monoprotic bases.
Yes, HClO4 is a monoprotic acid because it can donate only one proton (H+ ion) in a chemical reaction.
H3PO2 is monoprotic because it has one ionizable hydrogen atom. When it dissociates in solution, it releases one H+ ion.
No, not all monoprotic acids are strong acids. Strong acids completely dissociate in water to produce H+ ions, while weak acids only partially dissociate. Examples of strong monoprotic acids include hydrochloric acid (HCl) and sulfuric acid (H2SO4), while examples of weak monoprotic acids include acetic acid (CH3COOH) and citric acid (C6H8O7).
No, hydrofluoric acid is a weak monoprotic acid, meaning it can donate one proton per molecule in a reaction.
Monoprotic: HCl, CH3COOH (acetic acid)Diprotic: H2SO4, HOOCCOOH (oxalic acid)Triprotic: H3PO4, C3H4OH(COOH)3(citric acid)(All acidic protons are bold)
A Monoprotic acid is an acid that only has one hydrogen atom for each acid molecule. For example, hydrochloric acid is a monoprotic acid. It's chemical formula is HCl. Notice, only 1 H. A Diprotic acid has 2 H atoms, such as sulfuric acid, H2SO4.
One
YES
An example of a titration curve for a monoprotic acid, such as hydrochloric acid with sodium hydroxide, would show a sharp equivalence point. Initially, the pH is low due to the presence of the strong acid, then rises gradually as the base is added until it sharply increases at the equivalence point, showing a steep vertical rise.
It is a strong monoprotic base. Monoprotic means it can accept a proton (and Bronsted-Lowry theory calls proton acceptors BASES) So yes it can accept 1 (mono) proton. Strong acids or bases dissociate completely in aqueous solutions. Therefore this strong monoprotic base would dissociate completely into component ions in solution (this case water) yielding Na+, OH- and H20 (and heat).