sodium bromide is not an acid or base it is a solid neutral salt highly soluble in water.
When sodium chloride is added to a solution of a weak acid, the chloride ions from the salt will not react with the weak acid. However, the sodium ions can react with the weak acid to form a salt of the weak acid and a strong acid. This reaction can change the pH of the solution, depending on the relative strengths of the weak acid and the strong acid formed.
Calcium Bromide is a white, granular salt, very deliquescent, odorless, having a pungent, saline and bitter taste.
Sodium itself is neither an acid nor a base. However, it will react with water to form the strong base sodium hydroxide.
Salts formed from strong acid and strong base are neither acidic nor basic. Salts formed from strong acid and weak base are slightly acidic. Salts formed from weak acid and strong base are slightly basic.
The heat flow for the neutralization of a weak acid with sodium hydroxide is generally less exothermic compared to the neutralization of a strong acid with sodium hydroxide. This is because weak acids do not completely dissociate in solution, resulting in fewer ions that can react exothermically during neutralization.
Ammonium bromide is an acidic salt, as it is formed from the reaction of a weak base (ammonia) and a strong acid (hydrobromic acid). It will dissociate in water to produce ammonium ions, which can act as weak acids.
Hydrogen bromide is considered an acid because it can donate a proton in a chemical reaction. It is not a strong acid but rather a weak acid. Strong bases, on the other hand, are substances that readily accept protons in a reaction.
Sodium bromide (NaBr) is considered a strong electrolyte because it completely dissociates into its ions, sodium (Na⁺) and bromide (Br⁻), when dissolved in water. This complete ionization allows for efficient conduction of electricity in solution. As a result, sodium bromide exhibits high conductivity compared to weak electrolytes, which only partially dissociate in solution.
Sodium bicarbonate is a weak base.
Examples of salts of a weak acid and a strong base include sodium acetate (CH3COONa) and sodium carbonate (Na2CO3). Sodium acetate is formed from the weak acid acetic acid and the strong base sodium hydroxide, while sodium carbonate is formed from the weak acid carbonic acid and the strong base sodium hydroxide.
When sodium chloride is added to a solution of a weak acid, the chloride ions from the salt will not react with the weak acid. However, the sodium ions can react with the weak acid to form a salt of the weak acid and a strong acid. This reaction can change the pH of the solution, depending on the relative strengths of the weak acid and the strong acid formed.
Acetic acid (CH3COOH) is a weak acid and sodium hydroxide (NaOH) is a strong base.
No, bleach is not a weak acid. It is a strong oxidizing agent, typically made from sodium hypochlorite, which is a strong base.
Calcium Bromide is a white, granular salt, very deliquescent, odorless, having a pungent, saline and bitter taste.
Molten sodium acetateis dissociated. Sodium acetate is formed from a strong base and a weak acid.
Among the weak bases it is a relatively strong base
Carbonate (CO32-) is a weak (double) base, it can accept two protons (in 2 steps).CO32- + H+ HCO3-HCO3- + H+ H2CO3