Chemistry, asked by chaigidolmo, 2 months ago

why acids produce H+ ions in aqueous solutions only?​

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
26

Answer:

The thing is an acid is any substance that increases the hydronium ion concentration of the solution or yields hydronium ions on dissociation. Thus, in aqueous solution only can a substance dissociate and form hydronium ions and be classified as an acid. Not in any other form can it yield a H+ ion.

Answered by Ayansiddiqui12
0

Explanation:

  1. Every molecule of a strong base dissociates, producing a high concentration of OH–. When an acid and a base react (combine) releasing equal quantities of H+ ions and OH- ions, neutralization results. H+ ions and OH- ions combine (neutralize each other) to regenerate water.

why acids produce H+ ions in aqueous solutions only?

  • An acid is a substance that contains hydrogen and ionizes to produce hydrogen ions in aqueous solutions. A base is a substance that contains hydroxide in the formula and produces a hydroxide ion in solution.”

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