The conjugate acid for this anion is HBrO, or hypobromous acid.
Finding the formula of a conjugate acid is simple actually. All you have to do is remove a negative charge and ad an "H" at the beginning.
The chemical formula is CsBr since Cesium takes a +1 ion charge while Bromide takes a -1 ion charge so they cancel each other out and you are left with CsBr.
The chemical formula for magnesium bromide is MgBr2. This compound is composed of one magnesium ion (Mg2+) and two bromide ions (Br-).
Acetate is CH3COO because it is the conjugate base of acetic acid (CH3COOH). When acetic acid loses a proton (H+), it forms the acetate ion (CH3COO-).
Are you sure you know what you're asking for? The formula for HBr, hydrogen bromide, *is* HBr. If you're interested in how that substance is made, you may want to ask that question directly... I think you mean to say the "formula name" of HBr. If it's in H20, then it's called Hydrobromic acid; and if it's just a pure liquid, then it's called Hydrogen Bromide.
The electronic configuration of bromine is [Ar] 4s2 3d10 4p5. It needs to gain just one more electron in its 4p shell to attain the stable noble gas structure, thereby incurring a single negative charge. Therefore the chemical formula for the bromide ion is Br-.
The conjugate acid is the acetic acid, CH3COOH.
The conjugate acid of the water molecule is the hydroxonium ion.
2H + + SO4 2- <-> H2SO4 Sulfuric acid is the conjugate acid here.
The conjugate base of HF is the fluoride ion F-
HSO3-
The conjugate acid of the sulfate ion (SO4^2-) is sulfuric acid (H2SO4). To form the conjugate acid, you add a proton (H+) to the base molecule.
During an equilibrium in the following reaction.NH(3) + H(2)O NH(4)(+) + OH(-)NH(4) has the ability to give an H+ ion to OH ion and hence is the conjugate acid.
The conjugate base of perchloric acid is the ion chlorate (ClO4)-.
There is no conjugate) base coupled to bromide, Br-, because this Br- can NOT donate (by protolysing) a proton (H+) in water.However Br- itself is the very, very weakest base of the (very, very) strong conjugate acid HBr.This is the only possible conjugate acid/base pair:HBr/Br-
The A- ion is the generic term for the conjugate base of an acid. The charge is balanced by an H+ ion. The identity and formula of this ion depends on the acid, for example, if the acid is acetic CH3CO2H acid, A- is the acetate ion or CH3CO2- If it is sulfuric acid (H2SO4) A- is the bisulfate ion HSO4-
Formula: Br-
the conjugate acid of S2- is HS-.....