Oxide (O2-) and hydroxide (OH-)
Lowest pH, strong acids, then weak acids, then salts of strong acids and strong bases, then salts of weak acids and strong bases, then weak bases, then strong bases. All very confusing!
Strong acids and strong bases are both usually corrosive.
No, strong acids and bases are very soluble (will dissociate completely).
It's a salt with a high pH.Strong acids Weak acidsWeak bases Strong bases HBr CH3COOH NH3 NaOH HCl HF NH4OH KOH H2SO4 HCN Cu(OH)2 Ca(OH)2
Weak bases are soluble in water where as strong bases like KOH tend to heat up faster . Hence, strong bases are insoluble in water.
Lowest pH, strong acids, then weak acids, then salts of strong acids and strong bases, then salts of weak acids and strong bases, then weak bases, then strong bases. All very confusing!
No. Many strong electrolytes are bases or neutral salts.
Strong acids and strong bases are both usually corrosive.
Yes. There are strong bases such as sodium hydroxide (NaOH) and weak bases such as ammonia (NH3)
No, strong acids and bases are very soluble (will dissociate completely).
No. Not ALL metal hydroxides are strong bases, and not all strong bases are soluble.Only group 2 hydroxides (LiOH, NaOH, KOH, etc) and three group 2 metal hydroxides (CaOH, SrOH, and BaOH) are strong bases.Solubility is determined by how much the substance deionizes in a solution at a given temperature. A soluble substance is considered to be soluble if makes 0.1 M, and insoluble if it's less than 0.0001 M.For example, BaOH is a strong base, and is considered insoluble because less than 1% of it dissolves in water. But the bit that does is a very strong electrolyte.
It's a salt with a high pH.Strong acids Weak acidsWeak bases Strong bases HBr CH3COOH NH3 NaOH HCl HF NH4OH KOH H2SO4 HCN Cu(OH)2 Ca(OH)2
Weak bases are soluble in water where as strong bases like KOH tend to heat up faster . Hence, strong bases are insoluble in water.
naoh and baoh2 are both strong bases. bases end with an OH and acids start with an H.
Yes, group one and group 2 oxides (not including Mg or Be) are considered strong bases. Source: Masters degree
Strong bases dissociate or ionize completely. Weak bases dissociate or ionize only partially. The degree to which they ionize/dissociate is given by the Kb for each weak base.
They are neutral