HSO3-
The conjugate acid of CO3^2- is HCO3^-. It is formed by accepting a proton (H+) to form carbonic acid (H2CO3).
The conjugate base of HCO3 is CO3^2-.
2H + + SO4 2- <-> H2SO4 Sulfuric acid is the conjugate acid here.
The conjugate base of HCO3- is CO32-. Conjugates always differ by one H+. A conjugate base has one fewer H+, while a conjugate acid has one more H+.
The conjugate acid of the sulfate ion (SO4^2-) is sulfuric acid (H2SO4). To form the conjugate acid, you add a proton (H+) to the base molecule.
The conjugate acid of CO3^2- is HCO3^-. It is formed by accepting a proton (H+) to form carbonic acid (H2CO3).
The conjugate base of HCO3 is CO3^2-.
2H + + SO4 2- <-> H2SO4 Sulfuric acid is the conjugate acid here.
The conjugate base of HCO3- is CO32-. Conjugates always differ by one H+. A conjugate base has one fewer H+, while a conjugate acid has one more H+.
The conjugate acid of the sulfate ion (SO4^2-) is sulfuric acid (H2SO4). To form the conjugate acid, you add a proton (H+) to the base molecule.
The compound formed by H⁺ and CO₃²⁻ ions is called carbonic acid, which has the chemical formula H₂CO₃.
The formula for acetate is CH3COO- or C2H3O2-. It is the conjugate base of acetic acid.
The conjugate base and conjugate acid for HS04 is: Conjugate acid is H2SO4 Conjugate base is SO42
Considering that CO3, or carbonic ACID, this substance would be considered an acid. * actually, whoever wrote this is wrong. CO3-2 is the conjugate base of a weak acid (HCO3-, bicarbonate) K2CO3 is actually a base. and CO3, isn't called carbonic acid, it is called carbonate.
Remember that a conjugated acid has one proton H+ more than the (conjugated) base of it.So H2S is conjugated as acidto the base HS- .
H3PO4==============Phosphoric acid.
CO32-.