vinegar
pH of the strong acid solution will be lower than the pH of the weak acid solution due to the stronger dissociation of the strong acid.
The name of HF in solution is hydrofluoric acid.
The chemist will use 100 liters of the 80% acid solution and 100 liters of the 30% acid solution to make a 200-liter solution that is 62% acid. The amount of acid in the 80% solution will be 0.8 * 100 = 80 liters, and in the 30% solution, it will be 0.3 * 100 = 30 liters.
Nitrous acid in solution can be written as HNO2(aq).
A weak acid refers to the extent to which the acid dissociates in a solution, while a dilute acid refers to the concentration of the acid in a solution. Therefore, they are not the same but can be related in the sense that a weak acid may be present in a dilute solution.
It is on the organic functional group table
I believe you are asking about the formula for ethanoic acid rather than ethonoic acid, which doesn't exist. Ethanoic acid is the proper, systematic (IUPAC) name for acetic acid. The molecular formula is: HOOC-CH2CH3.
pH of the strong acid solution will be lower than the pH of the weak acid solution due to the stronger dissociation of the strong acid.
The name of HF in solution is hydrofluoric acid.
The chemist will use 100 liters of the 80% acid solution and 100 liters of the 30% acid solution to make a 200-liter solution that is 62% acid. The amount of acid in the 80% solution will be 0.8 * 100 = 80 liters, and in the 30% solution, it will be 0.3 * 100 = 30 liters.
It would be named as a dilute solution of a weak acid.
Nitrous acid in solution can be written as HNO2(aq).
The presence of an acid lowers the pH of the solution in water.
To create a 400 L solution that is 62% acid, you would need 200 L of the 80% acid solution and 200 L of the 30% acid solution. This would result in a final solution with the desired concentration.
no it doesn't.dissolving or making a solution of an acid makes a more dilute solution of the acid.
A weak acid refers to the extent to which the acid dissociates in a solution, while a dilute acid refers to the concentration of the acid in a solution. Therefore, they are not the same but can be related in the sense that a weak acid may be present in a dilute solution.
There are 48 mL of acid in 320 mL of a 15% acid solution. This is calculated by multiplying the volume of the solution by the percentage of acid in the solution: 320 mL x 0.15 = 48 mL.