Chemistry, asked by begummuskan548, 11 months ago

can a substance behave as an acid or base in the absence of water ​

Answers

Answered by dreadwing
11

<font size="+3"><font color="#ff0000"><p style="font:italic small-caps bold 18px/24px Garamond, Georgia, Times, Serif;width:200px;">ANSWER..!</p></font></font>

<p style="font:italic small-caps bold 18px/24px Garamond, Georgia, Times, Serif;width:200px;">It ionizes due to the polar covalent nature of water and its partial charge. So if the water is not present, the HCl cannot ionize and hence cannot donate H+ ions therefore not displaying acid properties. This is why all acids are soluble (and must be soluble) in water.</p>

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