Chemistry, asked by aaravshrivastwa, 11 months ago

What is Lowry-Bronsted Theory of Acids and Bases? ​

Answers

Answered by aachintya
7

A Bronsted-Lowry acid is a solution that donates protons, and is known as a proton donor. ... The Bronsted-Lowry base, on the other hand, is a solution that accepts protons, and is known as a proton acceptor. Going back to a Bronsted-Lowry acid, in general it must contain a hydrogen ion that it can give up.

Answered by Sunillende12
1

Answer:

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Explanation:

The Brønsted–Lowry theory is an acid–base reaction theory which was proposed independently by Johannes Nicolaus Brønsted and Thomas Martin Lowry in 1923.[1][2] The fundamental concept of this theory is that when an acid and a base react with each other, the acid forms its conjugate base, and the base forms its conjugate acid by exchange of a proton (the hydrogen cation, or H+). This theory is a generalization of the Arrhenius theory.

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