asked 103k views
3 votes
"An acid is a substance that forms hydrogen ions when dissolved in water." this is an example of-

2 Answers

4 votes
Hmm. This is very unspecific but it could either be indicating the pH of the solution or just saying it is an aqeous solution.
answered
User Gimelist
by
7.8k points
3 votes

"An acid is a substance that forms hydrogen ions when dissolved in water." this is an example of Arrhenius theory .

Explanation:

Any substance that, after ionisation, dissolves in liquid and produce hydrogen ions called Arrhenius acid (HCl, HCN,etc). Whereas, a substance that dissolves in aqueous releases hydroxide ions called Arrhenius base (NAOH, KOH, etc).

Arrhenius theory elaborates why acids have same properties: The internal properties of acids are determined by the presence of
H^(+) ions formed by dissolving acids in aqueous. These also explain why acid neutralises bases and vice versa. Acids give an
H^(+) ion and the bases give an
O H^(-) ions.

Example:


H C l \rightarrow H^(+)(a q)+C l^(-)(a q)

Where, (aq) stands for aqueous which means in the presence of water that is, water acts as a solvent.

answered
User Shaughn
by
7.5k points

No related questions found

Welcome to Qamnty — a place to ask, share, and grow together. Join our community and get real answers from real people.