H+ + OH- = H2O
Hf + oh- ---> f- + h2o
HF is a weak acid meaning it is a weak electrolyte, which by definition, does not readily disassociate, so it is not removed from the chemical formula.
No, it is not ionic. HF is covalent.
Yes, HF is an ionic compound. Electronegativity of H is 2.1 and that of F is 3.98. As the electronegativity difference is greater than 1.4 it is a ionic compound.
Ionic, has an ElectroNegativity of 1.9.
Hf + oh- ---> f- + h2o
The net ionic equation for the reaction of 1HF and MGCl2, with 2HF and NHbR, would be approximately 2GCF. This can fluctuate a bit, but will wholly depend on if the NHbR changes at all.
HF is a weak acid meaning it is a weak electrolyte, which by definition, does not readily disassociate, so it is not removed from the chemical formula.
No, it is not ionic. HF is covalent.
Yes, HF is an ionic compound. Electronegativity of H is 2.1 and that of F is 3.98. As the electronegativity difference is greater than 1.4 it is a ionic compound.
Ionic, has an ElectroNegativity of 1.9.
Hf, reactants > Hf, products
naoh and baoh2 are both strong bases. bases end with an OH and acids start with an H.
From what I've been told, because HF is a weak acid and therefore a weak electrolyte you are not supposed to break it up into cations and anions. Not sure how you would be getting F- as a spectator in other aq reactions, unless there's an extra rule that I simply haven't been taught.
as far as i know only HF can dissolve sio2
HF (Hydrogen Flouride) is an ionic bond in all states.
None of them, KCl is ionic, HF, H2O and F2 are covalent