Bases are substances that can undergo neutralization reactions with acids. Hydroxides of Group 1 and 2 can be given as examples for bases.
Chat with our AI personalities
Soap, Drain cleaners, baking soda, household cleaner, milk of magnesia, tums. Other examples: sodium hydroxide, potassium hydroxide, lithium hydroxide, magnesium hydroxide, etc.
There are many more than ten bases. If this question is part of a homework assignment, you'll need to actually read it yourself to determine what specific ten bases were mentioned in the text. Some simple examples of inorganic bases: LiOH, NaOH, RbOH, CsOH, KOH, Mg(OH)2, Mg(OH)2, Ca(OH)2, Sr(OH)2, Fe(OH)2.
A three-dimensional figure with two congruent polygon bases and all remaining sides as parallelograms is called a prism. The bases can be any polygon, such as a triangle, rectangle, or hexagon, and the sides connecting the bases are parallelograms, which maintain the same shape as the bases. The height of the prism is the perpendicular distance between the two bases. Examples include triangular prisms and rectangular prisms.
A cylinder, a frustum of a cone, a sphere or ellipsoid with slices cut off the top and bottom, half a torus (doughnut), are some examples.
Neither have square bases, both have circular bases.