A-Strong
A strong electrolyte is a substance that completely ionizes into ions when dissolved in a solution, resulting in high conductivity. Strong electrolytes include soluble salts like NaCl and strong acids like HCl.
This leads to neutral water by H+ + OH- --> H2O and neutral salt solution when added in equavalent amounts, BUT it is NOT a buffered solution.
An example of a substance that ionizes completely in aqueous solutions to produce H3O+ ions is hydrochloric acid (HCl). When dissolved in water, HCl dissociates into H+ and Cl- ions, with the H+ ions combining with water molecules to form hydronium ions (H3O+).
A strong electrolyte is a substance that ionizes completely or about 100% in an aqueous environment. Examples of strong electrolytes are neutral salts, such as NaCl, KCl, KBr, and LiCl. Strong acids and bases are also strong electrolytes, including HCl, HBr, HI, H2S04, NaOH, KOH, and LiOH.
All of them. The definition of a strong acid is a molecule that completely dissociates into hydrogen ions and a negatively charged ion in water. In contrast, a weak acid is a molecule that partially dissociates into hydrogen ions and a negative charge ion in water - you can find both the intact acid form (HA) and the ion forms (H+ and A-) in the water.
It dissociates (or ionizes) nearly completely with water.
A substance that ionises completely in water which in most cases is an acid are known as strong acids,they can also be called polar substances.
A strong acid ionizes partially in water while a weak acid ionizes fully in water.
HClorHydrochloric acid
No, HClO3 (chloric acid) is considered a strong acid. It ionizes almost completely in water to produce H+ ions.
An acid that dissociates completely in water is called a strong acid. This means that it fully ionizes into its constituent ions in solution, leading to a high concentration of hydronium ions (H3O+). Strong acids have a high affinity for donating protons to water molecules.
It is a strong acid. Hint: if the formula begins with H it is usually an acid.
NaOH is a strong base because it dissociates completely in water to produce hydroxide ions. NH3 is a weak base because it only partially ionizes in water. Ba(OH)2 is a strong base because it dissociates completely to produce hydroxide ions. HF is a weak base because it only partially ionizes in water.
Sulfuric acid is considered a strong acid because it ionizes completely in water to form H+ and HSO4- ions. It is highly corrosive and has a low pH.
A strong acid completely ionizes in water to release all of its hydrogen ions, resulting in a high concentration of H+ ions. In contrast, a weak acid only partially ionizes in water, resulting in a lower concentration of H+ ions. Strong acids have a low pH and are very reactive, while weak acids have a higher pH and are less reactive.
Yes, HCl is a strong monoprotic acid because it ionizes completely in water to release only one hydrogen ion (H+) per molecule of HCl.
...do not quote me but... It is in reference to the ionization. The "stronger" an acid/basic is, the more it ionizes. The weaker, the less it ionizes. its degree of ionization