Compounds such as alcohols and glucose also contain hydrogen but are not categorised as acids. Describe an Activity to prove it.
Answers
Answer:
Acids are substances that produce hydrogen ions as they dissociate with water. As some compounds dissociate in aqueous solution, hydrogen ions are produced, giving them an acidic character. The release of the H+ ion in water determines whether a compound is acidic or non-acidic.
HCl → H+ + Cl–
HNO3 → H+ + NO3–
While compounds like glucose and alcohol contain hydrogen, they do not have an acidic nature. The hydrogen in them does not separate as easily as the hydrogen in acids. When they dissolve in water, they will not separate into hydrogen ions.
Explanation:
Take samples of alcohol, glucose and hydrochloric acid. Take a 100 mL Beaker and take a fork and fix the nails. Place the cork inside the beaker and connect the nails to two terminals of a 6-volt battery through a bulb and a switch. Add some hydrochloric acid to the beaker and on the current. Repeat the procedure with alcohol and glucose.
In the case of acid, the bulb will glow
In the case of alcohol and glucose, it does not glow
Since ions carry the electric current through the solution, the above conclusion can be made. Acid ionizes to give H+ ions in an aqueous medium but glucose and alcohol do not furnish H+ ions even though they contain hydrogen atoms.
Activity to prove alcohols and glucose also contain hydrogen but are not categorized as acids
Explanation:
Take the solution of dilute hydrochloric solution and glucose. Two nails are fitted on a cork and are kept it in a 100 mL beaker. The nails are then connected to the two terminals of a 6-volt battery through a bulb and a switch. Dilute HCl is poured in the beaker and current is switched on. Now, the Same experiment is performed with a glucose solution and an alcohol solution.
We will observe that the bulb glows in HCl solution and does not glow in the glucose solution.
Because: HCl dissociate into H + (aq) and Cl -(aq) ions. These ions conduct electricity in the solution resulting in the glowing of the bulb. On the other hand, the glucose solution does not dissociate into ions. Therefore, it does not conduct electricity