The base formed when an acid loses an H+
If you are referring to conjugate acids and bases, a conjugate acid is an acid that can donate a H+ in order to form a conjugate base. For example, HCl can donate it's H+ and create the conjugate base Cl-. On the other hand, a conjugate base would just be the opposite where chloride could add a hydrogen in order to create the conjugate acid.
The conjugated principal point is a term used in optics to refer to the point where the chief ray of a light ray bundle passes through the optical axis after being reflected or refracted by an optical system. It is also known as the focal point or image point. The position of the conjugated principal point depends on the characteristics and parameters of the optical system.
Cross-conjugation is a special type of conjugation in a molecule, when in a set of three Pi bonds only two pi-bonds interact with each other by conjugation, the third one is excluded from interaction [1]. In classical terms it means that the strict alternation of single and double bonds --CH=CH–CH=CH–CH-- (i.e., conjugated) is interrupted by two consecutive single bonds at each cross-conjugated point in the cross-conjugated pathway: --CH=CH–C(=CH)–CH=CH--. Examples of cross-conjugation can be found in molecules such as benzophenone, divinylether, dendralenes and fullerene. The type of conjugation has an impact on reactivity and molecular electronic transitions.
'le régal' is the delight in Egnlish (like the shepherd's delight...). Règla can be a conjugated form of 'régler', meaning to do the settings of a device or machinery, or meaning to pay one's bill.
121 in base 4 = 16 + 8 + 1 (base ten) = 2584 in base 16 = 128 + 4 (base ten) = 132132 + 25 = 157(base 10) = 9D (base 16) = 2131 (base 4)
Remember that a conjugated acid has one proton H+ more than the (conjugated) base of it.So H2S is conjugated as acidto the base HS- .
In H2O the conjugate base is H2PO4-, being conjugated to the acid H3PO4. As well: H3PO4 is conjugated acid to the base H2PO4-.
Example [OH-]acid (!) conjugated with [O2-]baseor else, in water: [H2O]acid (!) conjugated with [OH-]base
The one is a weak acid, the other is its conjugated base (sodium salt of - ). There is NO reaction because they are conjugated.
Actually it is the base form of the verb that is conjugated. They are conjugated to make different forms according to voice, mood, tense, number, and person.It just happens in English that base forms are used for some present sentences.
Conjugated pair of acid / base
Conjugated bases always have one proton less than its (conjugated) acids:So the conjugated base of carbonic acid ( H2CO3 ) is: hydrogen carbonate, formula HCO3-
The conjugated acid of HCO3- is: H2CO3, carbonic acid.Conjugated pairs of acid and base always differ ONE (1) proton (H+): The acid WITH and the base WITHOUT it.So, on the other hand the conjugated base of HCO3- is: CO32-, carbonate.
.. in a proton and a conjugated base ion: this is called the protolysis, mostly in water.
No, a conjugate acid is simply a product of an acid-base reaction. Every base has a conjugate acid.
Ca-acetate is a weak base, conjugated with a weak acid: H-acetate (i.e. acetic acid)
They protolise COMPLETELY (with) weak conjugated counterparts (base or acid respectively) or with weak amfolytes like water (acid AND base).