Propanoic acid is a stronger acid than alcohol because it can donate a proton more readily due to the presence of a carboxylic acid group which is more acidic compared to the hydroxyl group in alcohols. The presence of the oxygen in the carboxyl group stabilizes the resulting carboxylate ion formed after proton donation, making it easier for the acid to dissociate.
Methyl alcohol (methanol) is actually not the most acidic compound. Stronger acids, such as hydrochloric acid (HCl) or sulfuric acid (H2SO4), have lower pKa values and are more acidic than methanol. Methanol is a weak acid compared to these stronger acids.
Carboxylic acids are weaker acids than sulfuric acid. This is because carboxylic acids have two weak acidic hydrogen atoms compared to sulfuric acid's strong acidic hydrogen atoms. This makes sulfuric acid a stronger acid than carboxylic acids.
Not at all, but it depends on how dilute the sulphuric acid, but usually no.
Alcohol is neither acidic nor alkaline. It is a separate category of chemical compound that does not fit into the classification of acids or bases.
Hydrochloric acid is more acidic than picric acid. Hydrochloric acid fully dissociates in solution to release hydrogen ions, resulting in a lower pH compared to picric acid, which is a weaker acid that does not fully dissociate in solution.
Methyl alcohol (methanol) is actually not the most acidic compound. Stronger acids, such as hydrochloric acid (HCl) or sulfuric acid (H2SO4), have lower pKa values and are more acidic than methanol. Methanol is a weak acid compared to these stronger acids.
Carboxylic acids are weaker acids than sulfuric acid. This is because carboxylic acids have two weak acidic hydrogen atoms compared to sulfuric acid's strong acidic hydrogen atoms. This makes sulfuric acid a stronger acid than carboxylic acids.
Yes. Alcohol is acidic, thereby increasing the incidence of acid reflux.
Iso-propyl alcohol shows slightly acidic behaviour.
Not at all, but it depends on how dilute the sulphuric acid, but usually no.
Alcohol is neither acidic nor alkaline. It is a separate category of chemical compound that does not fit into the classification of acids or bases.
An acidic part of an ester can be obtained by hydrolyzing the ester with an acid, such as hydrochloric acid or sulfuric acid. This reaction breaks the ester bond, yielding the parent carboxylic acid and alcohol.
Hydrochloric acid is more acidic than picric acid. Hydrochloric acid fully dissociates in solution to release hydrogen ions, resulting in a lower pH compared to picric acid, which is a weaker acid that does not fully dissociate in solution.
No. As an alcohol it's technically very, very weakly acidic.
No, it isn't. It's essentially neutral. Some alcohols are weakly acidic... phenol is one of the more acidic ones, and was at one time even called "carbolic acid."
Yes, it is acidic:with water it forms an acid (suflurous acid, H2SO3)with base it neutralizes by forming a sulfite salt or (a weaker) base anion SO32-
Acetic acid (CH3COOH) is weaker than monochloroacetic acid (ClCH2COOH) because the presence of a chlorine atom in monochloroacetic acid increases the electron-withdrawing effect, making the carboxylic acid group more acidic by stabilizing the negative charge on the conjugate base. This stabilization leads to easier dissociation of the proton, resulting in stronger acidity.