Will you accept "it doesn't exist"?
If not, too bad, because it doesn't.
No, a buffer system is made up of a weak acid and its conjugate base or a weak base and its conjugate acid. KCl and NaCl are both strong electrolytes and do not act as a buffer system when combined.
Ammonia is a base, not an acid. When mixed with red cabbage indicator, it may turn the solution blue or green, indicating a basic pH.
Bromide is not, in an of itself, an acid or a base. Bromide is capable of combining with an H+ ion and then becomes Hydrobromic Acid. Due to Bromine's position on the periodic table it is likely to form acids, not bases.
The solutions of ferric nitrate in water are acidic, because ferric hydroxide is a weak base while nitric acid is a strong acid.
Ephedrine sulfate will act as a weak acid in solution because yes it is the salt of a weak base (ephedrine) and a strong acid (sulfuric acid)
The pH or potential of hydrogen is the figure that expresses the alkalinity and acidity of a solution which 7 is the neutral scale. The pH of the solution containing 100m HONH2 and 100m HONH3CL is 6.03.
An acid plus a base will yield a salt and water in a neutralization reaction.
H3O is a strong acid.
Acid plus Base gives a Salt and Water. Acid plus Metal gives Hydrogen gas and a Salt.
This is an double-displacement reaction, in this case and acid-base reaction.
Base
An acid plus a base will react to form salt and water in a neutralization reaction. The properties of the resulting salt will depend on the specific acid and base involved in the reaction.
An acid plus a base will yield a salt and water. In textbooks this is often written as: HA + BOH yields AB + HOH The above means an acid with its hydronium ion added to a base with its hydroxyl group will yield a salt composed of the acid and the base plus water (hydrogen plus hydroxyl is HOH or H2O).
OH(-) A hydroxide. base
1. acid/base 2. protolysis 3. reversible proton exchange 4. .... reactions
(OH- is a base) (H+ is an acid) Therefore by adding water to HSO3, the OH- ion is produced therefore it is an Arrhenius base.
No, it forms an acid, H2O + CO2 --> H2CO3 (carbonic acid)