Chemistry, asked by franceuro6, 9 months ago

Why is tetraoxosulphate (VI) acid able to produce two types of salts, unlike trioxonitrate(V) acid?

Answers

Answered by mysticaldimple88
18

Answer:

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Explanation:

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As an acid - H2SO4 is dibasic and ionizes almost completely in solution, this makes it a strong acid. Due to it being dibasic, it forms two kinds of salts with alkalis. Reactive metals would displace hydrogen from dilute tetraoxosulphate(VI) acid.

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Answered by rk84678010
9

Answer:

As an acid - H2SO4 is dibasic and ionizes almost completely in solution, this makes it a strong acid. Due to it being dibasic, it forms two kinds of salts with alkalis. Reactive metals would displace hydrogen from dilute tetraoxosulphate(VI) acid.

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