Chemistry, asked by science582, 8 months ago

Does ethanoic acid dissolved in methylbenzene produce electricity?

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Answered by Anonymous
5

Answer:

Hydrogen chloride, outside of water, is not an acid in the sense that an acid is an entity that gives rise to a free proton. When hydrogen chloride is in an aqueous environment the following occurs:

HCl + H2O = H3O+ + Cl_

ie, a free, solvated proton is produced from the strongly dissociated acid and a chloride ion in equimolar amounts. Thus, the litmus turns red.

Methylbenzene, on the other hand, is incapable of associating with hydrogen from the hydrogen chloride to produce a free proton. Bear in mind that H+ does not exist, although, for convenience, the solvated proton is often written as H+. The hydrogen chloride remains as a covalent molecule without conferring acidity to the methylbenzene. The mixture of HCl and C6H5CH3 remains with each molecule retaining its non-reacted and independent entity.

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