yes HBr is an electrolyte
The chemical formula for Dextromethorphan Hydrobromide (HBr) is C18H25NO·HBr.
H2SO4Sulfuric acid is a strong acid that disassociates almost 100% in solution.H +andHSO4 -( a further disassociation can take place but that is for college chemistry )And this disassociation is a strong acid disassociation and an electrolyte.
Polar!
3.21 moles HBr (6.022 X 10^23/1mole HBr) = 1.93 X 10^24 molecules of HBr
No, HBr is not an element. It is a compound made up of the elements hydrogen (H) and bromine (Br).
Hydrogen bromide is a strong electrolyte.
It is a strong acid. Hint: if the formula begins with H it is usually an acid.
Ka = [H+].[Br-] / [HBr] However the value of this expression is very high, because HBr is a STRONG acid, meaning that much more than 99.9% of the HBr molecules in water are protolized (ionized), making [H+] and [Br-] equal to the original (added) HBr amount, and the [HBr]-value nearly zero.
The chemical formula for Dextromethorphan Hydrobromide (HBr) is C18H25NO·HBr.
H2SO4Sulfuric acid is a strong acid that disassociates almost 100% in solution.H +andHSO4 -( a further disassociation can take place but that is for college chemistry )And this disassociation is a strong acid disassociation and an electrolyte.
For this you need the atomic (molecular) mass of HBr. Take the number of grams and divide it by the atomic mass. Multiply by one mole for units to cancel. HBr= 81.0 grams186 grams HBr / (81.0 grams) =2.30 moles HBr
The chemical formula of hydrobromic acis is HBr.
In the reaction, HBr donates a proton (H+) to H2O, making HBr the acid and H2O the base. The resulting products are Br- (conjugate base of HBr) and H3O+ (conjugate acid of H2O).
This compound is HBr.
Polar!
HBr is not a weak base; it is a strong acid. In water, HBr completely dissociates into H+ and Br- ions, leading to a high concentration of H+ ions in solution. This strong acidity makes HBr a poor proton acceptor and hence not a base.
Yes, HBr is a molecular compound. It consists of covalent bonds between hydrogen and bromine atoms, forming molecules of HBr.