sulphuric acd is dibasic acid.It is because it can give two hydrogens which makes it dibasic acid.
I think , the basicity of sulphuric acid is 1.
Yes, sulfuric acid is a monobasic acid because it can donate only one proton (H+) per molecule in an acid-base reaction.
the basisity of oxalic acid is dibasic acid
by carrying out a tritation and using your readings in calculations to determine the molarity of the acid against what you are reacting with it. you should find that 1 mol of H2SO4 relaeses 2 moles of hydrogen ions
The systematic name for sulphuric acid is sulfuric acid.
I think , the basicity of sulphuric acid is 1.
Yes, sulfuric acid is a monobasic acid because it can donate only one proton (H+) per molecule in an acid-base reaction.
Titration...after neutralizations with a base, molarity calculations are done and you will find that one mole sulphuric acid needed 2 moles of the given base in order for a complete reaction to occur. Can anyone give the method and calculations to this titration experiment please? and can anyone give a method and calculations to a gas collection experiment to prove that sulphuric acid is dibasic? ... I personally reckon that this is your AS chemistry planning exercise lol Do it yourself!!! make me. how would you know anyway?
The valency for sulphuric acid is H2SO4
the basisity of oxalic acid is dibasic acid
No, sulphuric acid is not found in vinegar.
No. It is a mixture of sulphuric acid and water.
Fertilisers contain Sulphuric acid.
Yes. Sulphuric acid is british
There are many different concentrations of "concentrated sulphuric acid". It is possible to deduce the concentration of the sulphuric acid by titration.
You can use either the nitric or hydrochloric acid as a replacement of the sulphuric acid.
The chemical formula of sulphuric acid is H2SO4.