The formic acid is a weak acid.
In order to have an effective buffer, one needs to have a weak acid or a weak base, and the salt (conjugate) of that weak acid or weak base. Examples would be :weak acid/conjugate base: acetic acid/sodium acetateweak base/conjugate acid: ammonia/ammonium chloride
Penicillin is a weak acid.
HF is a weak acid.
If you are titrating a base, using a weak acid as titrant would lead to the formation of a buffer as you added the weak acid. The weak acid would react with the base to form the salt of the weak acid + water, and this would buffer any changes in pH, thus making the titration meaningless.
Dissolved carbon dioxide in water (carbonic acid) is weak acid.
NO!!! CHOOH , which should be written as HCOOH is methanoic(formic) acid.
In order to have an effective buffer, one needs to have a weak acid or a weak base, and the salt (conjugate) of that weak acid or weak base. Examples would be :weak acid/conjugate base: acetic acid/sodium acetateweak base/conjugate acid: ammonia/ammonium chloride
A solution containing either a weak acid or a weak acid its saltor a weak base and its salt?
Yes and no. HCN is a salt, but it is also a weak acid.
The conjugate base of a weak acid is always a strong base
NaHCO3 is a weak base, with a conjugate acid of H2CO3+.
Buffer solution is a type of solution which contains acid and at the same time a base material. The two components are a weak acid and a conjugate base or a weak base and its conjugate acid.
CoCO3 (Cobalt II carbonate) would be a weak base.
CH3COOH is a acid. It is a weak acid.
it is a non electrolyte C2H5OH is not a base, its an alcohol, ETHYL ALCOHOL so its just an alcohol
No, NaCl is neither an acid, weak acid, or a (weak) base. It is considered a salt.
It is a very weak base. not acid