Formic acid and chloroacetic acid are stronger acid then acetic acid
Answers
An acid is considered stronger if it can lose a hydrogen easily to a base. Out of acetic acid and formic acid, formic acid is considered stronger because the CH3 in acetic acid is electron donating.
The CH3 actually contributes electron density towards the O-H bond, making it harder to remove the H, and making acetic acid a weaker acid than formic acid. This is all because the CH3 is an electron donating group.
Another way of explaining this is that the methyl group (-CH3) in acetic acid inductively donates electron density to the COOH, so the O-H bond is less likely to break. Formic acid does not have an electron donating group, so its O-H bond is slightly more polarized and more acidic.
So, chloroacetic acid is stronger than acetic acid. Answer: Due to presence of more electronegative atom Cl, the electron density on H of carboxyl group of chloroacetic acid is lower compare to of acetic acid and hence chloroacetic acid can release H at easier way.