No, battery acid (sulfuric acid) is not the strongest acid. The Strongest acid is fluoroantimonic acid.
Bear in mind the acid in a battery is in a diluted state-not concentrated. Although it could blind you, if it gets on the skin it will create a burning sensation before it does any permanent damage and you can wash it off or neutralize.
Battery water is generally sulfuric acid and is a strong acid, but not the strongest acid. Carborane acid is the world's strongest acid, followed by fluorosulfonic acid. The acidity of carborane acid has been shown at least a million times stronger than concentrated sulfuric acid, and hundreds of times stronger than the previous record holder fluorosulfonic acid.
No. Stomach acid contains dilute hydrochloric acid, which is a strong acid, but not the strongest.
The strongest acid is fluoroantimonic acid which is 2×1019 times stronger than 100% sulfuric acid.
A battery acid is a variety of acid used as an electrolyte in a battery - usually sulphuric acid.
I would think the acid is the strongest force
Hydroiodic Acid
The strongest acid is fluoroantimonic acid, which is a superacid. It is created by mixing hydrogen fluoride with antimony pentafluoride. Fluoroantimonic acid is over a billion times stronger than sulfuric acid.
Among halogen acids, HX (X = F, Cl, Br, I), HI is the strongest acid.
No
No
The stomach has the strongest acid concentration in the body. It is known as gastric acid and has a pH of 1 to 2 and is composed of hydrochlorlic acid.
No, the complete dissociation of hydroxide ions represents the strongest base, not the strongest acid. The strongest acid would be a substance that completely dissociates to release the highest concentration of hydrogen ions in a solution.