CHEM 201 Lecture Notes - Lecture 33: Amphoterism, Lithium Hydroxide, Hydrogen Bond

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30 Apr 2020
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In fact, monoatomic h+ ions do not exist in any solutions or solution it is always covalently bonded to something: h+ ion would have no electrons at all; its just a nucleus. *some sources classify hclo3 as a weak acid. *acids and bases not in the list above are to be considered as weak. *ammonia (nh3) is a common weak base: weaks involve equilibria and strongs do not, when a strong acid dissolves in water, water pulls h+ off the acid molecule, leaving behind an anion. The anion does not pull back on h+ to a significant extent. There is no significant equilibrium: when a weak acids dissolves in water, water pulls h+ off the acid molecule, leaving behind an anion. Autoionization: definition: the ionization of a single compound of and by itself. Water example: on the left, water molecules do their usual hydrogen bonding thing.

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