Chemistry, asked by vanigoyal126, 7 months ago

why isn't NH3 an Arrhenius acid?

Answers

Answered by tisha2306
1

Answer:

In the Arrhenius acid/base theory, acids are hydrogen ion donors and bases are hydroxide ion donors. Ammonia doesn't have any hydroxide ions, so it can't be a hydroxide ion donor. The problem is that ammonia acts like a base. Bottles labelled “ammonium hydroxide” are just solutions of ammonia in water.

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Answered by shrinivasnavindgikar
0

Answer:

Explanation:

In the Arrhenius acid/base concept , acids are hydrogen ion donors and bases are hydroxide ion donors. Ammonia don't have a hydroxide ion so it can't be a hydroxide ion donor.

So NH3 isn't an Arrhenius acid

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