English, asked by kbalaji2627, 6 months ago

sulphourous acid is a dibasic acid

Answers

Answered by urvashisantosh
0

Explanation:

Sulphuric Acid, H2SO4, is a dibasic acid, because it contains two hydrogen atoms which ionise in aqueous solution to become Hydrogen Ions, H(+). ... The two acidic hydrogen ions are replaced by two sodium ions. Similar reaction occurs with potassium carbonate.

Answered by Anonymous
0

Sulphuric acid is a dibasic acid which means that on dissociation it will give two hydrogen ions and a sulphate ion.

H2SO4→2H ++SO2/4-

It is a strong acid and hence it undergoes complete ionization.

When H2SO4 reacts with strong base it leads to formation of neutral salts and when it reacts with weak base then the salt produced is acidic in nature. This happens through the neutralization reaction.

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