Chemistry, asked by ahenbachingakham, 27 days ago

what is bronsted Lowry concept of acids and bases.How does this concept deffer from Arrhenius concept if acids and bases?​

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
0

Answer:

The Arrhenius definition says that all acids must be in aqueous solution. The Bronsted-Lowry definition says that an acid is anything that can donate a proton.

An Arrhenius acid is a substance that contains hydrogen and  produces hydrogen ions in solution.

HCl→H++Cl−

According to Bronsted and Lowry, an acid is a proton donor.

HCl+NH3​→NH4+​+Cl−

Explanation:

Answered by souvikdutta6067
0

Answer:

  • Brønsted-Lowry theory, also called proton theory of acids and bases, a theory, introduced independently in 1923 by the Danish chemist Johannes Nicolaus Brønsted and the English chemist Thomas Martin Lowry, stating that any compound that can transfer a proton to any other compound is an acid, and the compound that accepts the proton is a base. A proton is a nuclear particle with a unit positive electrical charge; it is represented by the symbol H+ because it constitutes the nucleus of a hydrogen atom.
  • An Arrhenius Acid is something that donates a proton to water, and Bronsted-Lowry Concept extends this to any substance, where an acid is a proton donor and a base is a proton acceptor

Explanation:

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