The answer might depend on what kind of solution you are talking about. If you start with water and add acid, you get a dilute solution of acid, then a more concentrated solution as you add more.
If you started pouring water into acid, you would initially get a very concentrated solution, then diluter as you add more water.
If you are in the lab with a beaker of acid and a beaker of water and need to mix them, always pour the acid into the the water, not the other way around. The mixing generates heat. There is a slight chance that the beaker could break or get knocked over just after you start mixing. Spilling hot acid with a little bit of water is far more dangerous than spilling hot water with a little bit of acid.
Acid + base conjugate base + conjugate acid
Acetamide is a weak base. It can undergo protonation to form the conjugate acid, acetic acid, in acidic solutions.
A Brønsted-Lowry acid-base reaction involves the transfer of a proton (H+) from the acid to the base. The acid donates a proton, while the base accepts a proton. This results in the formation of a conjugate base from the acid and a conjugate acid from the base.
Acid + base salt + water
Salt is neither an acid nor a base. It is a compound formed by the reaction of an acid with a base, which can result in a neutral pH depending on the specific acid and base involved.
Acid + base conjugate base + conjugate acid
Acid + base salt + water
Acetamide is a weak base. It can undergo protonation to form the conjugate acid, acetic acid, in acidic solutions.
A Brønsted-Lowry acid-base reaction involves the transfer of a proton (H+) from the acid to the base. The acid donates a proton, while the base accepts a proton. This results in the formation of a conjugate base from the acid and a conjugate acid from the base.
The base which a certain acid turns into.Every acid had a conjugate base:HX (acid) X- (conjugate base)The acid is also called the base's conjugate acid.
An acid base imbalance can result in
acid. you can actually run batteries off it.
In a Brønsted-Lowry acid-base reaction, an acid donates a proton (H+) to a base, which accepts the proton. This results in the formation of a conjugate base from the acid and a conjugate acid from the base. The overall reaction involves the transfer of a proton from the acid to the base.
Salt is neither an acid nor a base. It is a compound formed by the reaction of an acid with a base, which can result in a neutral pH depending on the specific acid and base involved.
CH3COOH is acetic acid, which is a weak acid. The conjugate base of acetic acid is acetate ion (CH3COO-).
The acid formed when a base gains a proton is called a conjugate acid of the base. This process is known as protonation, where the base accepts a proton to become an acid. The conjugate acid will have one more proton than the base.
An anhydride is not an acid and not a base.