Chemistry, asked by idhant602, 7 months ago

what is Monobasic acid???? ​

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Answered by Anonymous
4

Answer:

A monobasic or monoprotic acid, able to donate one proton per molecule. A monobasic salt, with one hydrogen atom, with respect to the parent acid, replaced by cations. Monobasic, or Monotypic taxon, a taxonomic group (taxon) that contains only one immediately subordinate taxon.

Answered by navdeep1667
5

Answer:

A monobasic acid has only one hydrogen ion to donate to a base in an acid-base reaction. Hence, a monobasic molecule has solely one replaceable hydrogen atom. Monobasic acids ionize in water to give only one H+ ion per acid molecule. Example: HCl.

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