Examples of using Conjugate base in English and their translations into Dutch
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So we know an equilibrium constant is equal to your concentration of hydrogen times a concentration of your conjugate base over your concentration of your weak acid.
The corresponding triflate anion, CF 3SO- 3, is an extremely stable polyatomic ion, being the conjugate base of triflic acid(CF3SO3H),
So if I just wrote this as, A minus-- so I just wrote its conjugate base-- is in equilibrium with the conjugate base grabbing some water from the surrounding aqueous solution.
So in general-- I mean, you can kind of remember it, but I think it's maybe common sense-- a strong acid's conjugate base is neutral in water.
So this is going to be a neutral-- if you put this in water, it's really not going to do anything even though you are calling it hydrogen bromide's conjugate base.
And my concentration of my base, at this point-- I started with B and A over 2 gets more converted into my conjugate base, so I have B plus A over 2.
And we also could have written a base equilibrium, where we say the conjugate base could disassociate,
what is the conjugate base for hydrofluoric acid, you get rid of a hydrogen
this is getting annoying-- conjugate base-- sorry,
Hydroxybutyric acid(S)-2-hydroxybutyric acid 2-Hydroxybutyrate, the conjugate base of 2-hydroxybutyric acid,
we kept adding conjugate base over here.
Now, you could say, if you have H3O, you might say, hey, what's the conjugate base-- and that's a new word I just introduced you to-- what's the conjugate base for H3O if H3O is an acid?
the negative log of the acid equilibrium constant, plus the log of your conjugate base concentration divided by your conjugate acid concentration.
times your equilibrium constant, then you say your conjugate base concentration that you start off with.
A conjugated base belongs to an acid dat donated one proton.
Their conjugate bases, the selenolates, do enjoy limited applications in organic synthesis.
These anions are the conjugate bases of phosphorous acid H3PO3.
Butyrate is the traditional name for the conjugated base of butyric acid.
Butyrate is the traditional name for the conjugated base of butyric acid.
No basic conjugate bases left.