smell
Weak acid
Arthur K. C. Li has written: 'Fluid, electrolytes, acid-base and nutrition' -- subject(s): Acid-Base Imbalance, Acid-base equilibrium, Body fluids, Electrolytes, Homeostasis, Metabolism, Nutrition, Water-Electrolyte Balance, Water-Electrolyte Imbalance
When the K value is larger, it means that the system is more rigid and less likely to deform or change shape under external forces. This can lead to a stiffer response in the system and potentially reduce the amount of deformation or displacement that occurs.
No, KCl is not a Lewis base. It is an ionic compound composed of potassium cations (K+) and chloride anions (Cl-), which do not participate in Lewis acid-base reactions.
1/101 is then added
KCl is a salt composed of a cation (K+) from a base (potassium hydroxide) and an anion (Cl-) from an acid (hydrochloric acid). It is neither an acid nor a base but a salt.
Because KOH is potassium hydroxide, you can recall that in biology you must have learned about H+ being and acid and OH- being a base and K(OH) contains the one hydroxide making it a base, not an acid.
Yes, there is a pOH value in acidic solutions which is above 7.0 at the temperature of 298 K.
To calculate the standard state Gibbs Free Energy at pH 0, you first need to determine the concentrations of the species involved. For acetic acid dissociation, you can use the Ka value to calculate the concentrations of the acid and its conjugate base. Then, apply the standard state Gibbs Free Energy formula ΔG° = -RTln(K), where K is the equilibrium constant for the reaction. Using the concentrations of the species and the Ka value, you can determine ΔG° for the dissociation of acetic acid at pH 0.
KNO3 is a salt composed of a cation (K+) and an anion (NO3-). Since it does not contain hydrogen ions (H+), it is not classified as an acid. It also does not contain hydroxide ions (OH-), so it is not classified as a base.
Lead Nitrate is the salt of a strong acid (nitric acid) and a weak base (lead (II) or lead (IV) hydroxide). Salts like these are somewhat acidic so lead nitrate (regardless of the oxidation state of lead) is an acid.