One possible candidate would be Francium Hydroxide (FrOH), but due to the extreme rarity of such an element on the Earth's crust (30g at any one time) and its radioactivity, such a chemical may not be possible to produce. If we did manage to submerge a quantity of Francium in water, the resulting reaction would be very vigourous and dangerous, exceeding those of Caesium (Cs), owing to the fact that it is at the lowest end of Group 1.
Another option would be to use a Phosphazene base. Phosphazene bases are strong, non-metallic, non-ionic and low-nucleophilic bases. They are stronger bases than regular amine or amidine bases.
Nope. Ethanoic has a stronger hydrogen bond
The pH of an acid is lower than 7 on the pH scale, with stronger acids having pH values closer to 0.
Aromatic acids are generally stronger than aliphatic acids due to the resonance stabilization provided by the delocalization of electrons in the aromatic ring. This makes the aromatic acids more stable when releasing a proton, resulting in a stronger acid.
As with any acid, that depends entirely on its concentration. The greater the concentration (until saturation) the lower the pH. Lactic acid is a "middle of the road" weak acid; all in equal concentrations, lactic acid is stronger than citric, weaker than acetic, and about the same as formic.
Lye (sodium hydroxide) is a stronger base than battery acid (sulfuric acid) in terms of chemical strength and aggressiveness. Lye is highly caustic and can cause severe burns on contact with skin, while battery acid is corrosive but not as immediately damaging.
No, carbonic acid is stronger than vinegar. Carbonic acid is formed when carbon dioxide dissolves in water, whereas vinegar is a weaker acid composed of acetic acid.
If it is stronger than hydrochloric acid it will dissolve your tongue!
Oleum is more stronger acid than Sulfuric acid
Fluoroantimonic acid is much stronger. Even stronger than that is the Helium Hydride Cation (HeH+)
No. An acid with a large Ka is stronger. A lower pKa indicates a stronger acid.
In terms of acidity, hydrochloric acid is stronger than ethanoic acid. Hydrochloric acid is a mineral acid with a lower pH value and is therefore considered a stronger acid compared to ethanoic acid, also known as acetic acid.
Acetic acid is a stronger acid. Ethanol is an alcohol which is slightly acidic but usually neutral in nature.
No, nitrous acid is stronger. Nitrous acid pKa = 4.5 x 10^-4, while formic acid pKa - 1.7 x 10^-4.
Both are strong acids (this means stronger than H3O+) but HI is stronger than HCl.
i think it is phosphoric is stronger but I'm not sure?
yes formic acid is stronger than acetic acid.
Hydrochloric acid is stronger than acetic acid. This is because hydrochloric acid fully dissociates in water to form more H+ ions, making it a stronger acid compared to acetic acid, which only partially dissociates.