Chemistry, asked by Manishkumar054, 11 months ago

What is the Conjugate base of hydrogen atom?​

Answers

Answered by bhumipreet
2
According to the Bronsted-Lowry theory of acids and bases, an acid molecule donates a single proton to a water molecule, creating an H3O+ ion and a negatively-charged ion known as as "conjugate base." While acids such as sulfuric (H2SO4), carbonic (H2CO3) and phosphoric (H3PO4) have multiple protons (i.e. hydrogen atoms) to donate, each proton donated counts as a separate acid-conjugate base pair. For example, phosphoric acid only has one conjugate base: dihydrogen phosphate (H2PO4-). Meanwhile, hydrogen phosphate (HPO4 2-) is the conjugate base of dihydrogen phosphate and phosphate (PO4 3-) is the conjugate base of hydrogen phosphate.


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Manishkumar054: I knew everything that u have said.... but the answer for my question would be either electron or H- Would you think the answer is electron for the question or anything else
Answered by gugulothchaithanyasa
0

Answer:

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