Chemistry, asked by gautamajeet1996, 2 months ago

water Act as Acid Base nutral

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Answered by intelligent567
0

Answer:

Water is amphoteric, which means it can act as both a Brønsted-Lowry acid and a Brønsted-Lowry base. Strong acids and bases ionize completely in aqueous solution, while weak acids and bases ionize only partially. The conjugate base of a Brønsted-Lowry acid is the species formed after an acid donates a proton

Answered by anushanagtode
1

Answer:

This means the water is donating the hydrogen ion, which classifies it as an acid using the Brønsted concept. Good! As these two reactions show, water can act as an acid or a base; molecules (or ions) that can do this are called amphiprotic. When an amphiprotic molecule (or ion) reacts with an acid, it acts as a base.

Explanation:

Hope it helps.

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