an acid dissolved in water produce H+, a base dissolved in water removes H+
Question wording is unclear what process is meant.
Substances that remove H+ ions from a solution are called bases or alkalis. Bases react with H+ ions to form water, reducing the concentration of H+ ions in the solution. Examples of bases include sodium hydroxide (NaOH) and ammonia (NH3).
nah man. them acids has them lot. the H+ ions that is. but these basic solutions donate a massif amount of OH- ions compared to H+ ions when added to an aqueous solution.
it accepts H+ ions
it accepts H+ ions
it accepts H+ ions
An example of a compound that releases H+ ions when dissolved in water is hydrochloric acid (HCl). In aqueous solution, HCl dissociates into H+ and Cl- ions, increasing the concentration of H+ ions in the solution. This property makes hydrochloric acid a strong acid.
Not all the time. Only acids that react with metals will give of Hydrogen (H) Acid + Metal --> Salt + Hydrogen
Substances that remove H+ ions from a solution are called bases or alkalis. Bases react with H+ ions to form water, reducing the concentration of H+ ions in the solution. Examples of bases include sodium hydroxide (NaOH) and ammonia (NH3).
acid or acidic
A compound is acidic if it donates protons (H+) in solution, increasing the concentration of H+ ions. Conversely, a compound is basic if it accepts protons (H+) in solution, reducing the concentration of H+ ions by generating hydroxide ions (OH-). The pH scale is used to quantify the acidity or basicity of a solution.
Acid and Bases are different by its concentration of Hydrogen and Hydroxide. Acid is any compound that forms H+ ions in solution and base is a compound that forms OH- ions in solution. But Both are compounds forming a type of ion in a solution.
acid
The ionic compound for hydrochloric acid is hydrogen chloride, which is represented as HCl. In a water solution, HCl dissociates into H+ ions and Cl- ions, making it an ionic compound.
When a solution has more hydrogen ions it will be acidic.
pH of a substance is directly related to the the amount of H+ ions it produces in the solution. It is the negative logarithm of the concentration of the H+ ions in the solution of a substance.
an ACID. In chemistry, anything that "donates" H+ ions to a solution is considered an acid. On the other hand, a base is an H+ "acceptor", meaning that it reduces the concentration of H+ ions in solution, thus raising the pH. Another way to look at it is that bases are hydroxide ion (OH-) "donators".
nah man. them acids has them lot. the H+ ions that is. but these basic solutions donate a massif amount of OH- ions compared to H+ ions when added to an aqueous solution.