WHAT DO ALL ACIDS AND ALL BASES HAVE IN COMMON
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107
Relies on whether you need to portray them in a Lowry-Bronsted demonstrate or a Lewis corrosive base model. The previous says that all acids give a proton and all bases have an electron match accessible protonation. This covers a ton of acids and bases yet many are likewise missed. For instance, BR3 is an acid however it has no protons to give. Boron has an unfilled valence, however, and can acknowledge an electron match. It is this property, having the capacity to acknowledge an electron match (donated by a base) that characterizes a Lewis corrosive.
In this way, as a rule, a corrosive can acknowledge an electron match, a base can give an electron pair, and this characterizes what all acids have in common, and what all bases have in common.
In this way, as a rule, a corrosive can acknowledge an electron match, a base can give an electron pair, and this characterizes what all acids have in common, and what all bases have in common.
Answered by
352
Both acids and bases have a few common characteristics. Some of them are:
# They have the capability of conducting electricity.
# They become neutralized when they are disassociated in water or when they release their ions into water.
# They can change the color of litmus paper although the color differs for each of them.
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