Chemistry, asked by shobhachauhan175, 11 months ago

explain dilute sulphuric acid is stronger than concentrated sulphuric acid​

Answers

Answered by sweety9735
1

Answer:

When it comes to sulfuric acid, dilute sulfuric acid is stronger than a concentrated one. ... Also, the activity of sulfuric acid increases with dilution. In case of weaker acids, the dissociation increases with dilution, which means that as more and more water is added, more hydrogen ions will be generated.

Explanation:

Laboratory type sulfuric acid (about 98% by weight) is a concentrated (and strong) acid. ... For instance, 5% sulfuric acid is a dilute acid. A dilute acid, unlike a concentrated acid, will ionize to a greater degree in their solution (higher percent dissociation with decreasing concentration).

Answered by MƦAttrαctívє
9

Answer:

The presence of water in dilute sulphuric acid increases the hydrogen ion concentration. Hence it is a stronger acid than concentrated sulphuric acid which contains comparatively less water.

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