2H + + SO4 2- <-> H2SO4
Sulfuric acid is the conjugate acid here.
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 base and conjugate acid for HS04 is: Conjugate acid is H2SO4 Conjugate base is SO42
Yes, H2SO4 and SO4-2 are a conjugate acid-base pair. In this pair, H2SO4 is the acid that donates a hydrogen ion (H+) to become its conjugate base, SO4-2, which is the resulting species after losing a proton.
Neither. Sulfate, SO4, is a polyatomic ion. Sulfuric acid (H2SO4), however, is an acid.
The conjugate acid of SO4 2- is HSO4 -, also known as bisulfate or hydrogen sulfate. It is formed by adding a hydrogen ion to the sulfate ion.
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 base and conjugate acid for HS04 is: Conjugate acid is H2SO4 Conjugate base is SO42
Yes, H2SO4 and SO4-2 are a conjugate acid-base pair. In this pair, H2SO4 is the acid that donates a hydrogen ion (H+) to become its conjugate base, SO4-2, which is the resulting species after losing a proton.
Neither. Sulfate, SO4, is a polyatomic ion. Sulfuric acid (H2SO4), however, is an acid.
The conjugate acid of SO4 2- is HSO4 -, also known as bisulfate or hydrogen sulfate. It is formed by adding a hydrogen ion to the sulfate ion.
Yes, it is, another conjugate base of sulphuric acid is bisulphate ion, HSO4
The conjugate base for HSO4- is SO4^2-.
HSO4-
No, SO4 2- is not amphiprotic because it can accept but not donate protons. It acts as a base but not an acid in a chemical reaction.
SO4 (or more properly, SO42-) is not an acid but a very mildly basic ion called the sulfate ion. It can form sulfuric acid H2SO4, a strong acid
The conjugate base of HSO4- is SO4^2-. This is because when HSO4- donates a proton, it forms the sulfate ion (SO4^2-) by losing a hydrogen ion.
Conjugate base. HSO4 -