What are the conjugate acid and …
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Posted by Michael Chawngthu 4 years, 11 months ago
- 2 answers
Meghna Thapar 4 years, 11 months ago
HSO4- is a base on the other side of equation - it is the thing that ACCEPTS the proton, so it would act as a BASE. It is the conjugate base of H2SO4. H2SO4/HSO4- is an acid/conjugate base pair. H20 is the base in the forward rxn, because it accepts a proton, and becomes H3O+. An acid and a base which differ only by the presence or absence of a proton are called a conjugate acid-base pair. Thus NH3 is called the conjugate base of NH4+, and NH4+ is the conjugate acid of NH3. Similarly, HF is the conjugate acid of F–, and F– the conjugate base of HF.
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Aman Tripathi 4 years, 11 months ago
0Thank You