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This tag should be applied to questions concerning acid and base reactions. An acid is capable of donating a hydron/ proton (Brønsted acid) or capable of forming a covalent bond with an electron pair (Lewis acid). A base on the other hand is a chemical species/ molecular entity having an available pair of electrons capable of forming a covalent bond with a hydron/ proton (Brønsted base) or with the vacant orbital of some other species (Lewis base).

2 votes
1 answer
3k views

Metal carbonate + carbonic acid?

As metal carbonates are basic would there be a reaction if a sample of, say potassium carbonate, was added to carbonic acid? If so what would be the products? A balanced equation would be useful. Will …
The Garage Chemist's user avatar
5 votes
1 answer
2k views

pH of liquid hydrogen chloride vs hydrochloric acid

Is hydrogen chloride in liquid state acidic like hydrochloric acid? I know that hydrochloric acid is hydrogen chloride dissolved in water but I was wondering if liquid hydrogen chloride was also an ac …
The Garage Chemist's user avatar
0 votes
1 answer
765 views

Will this series of reactions work to produce potassium phosphate?

I want to end up with a solution or anhydrous sample of potassium phosphate with which I can grow larger crystals. I want a challenge and something to do so I don't want to buy potassium phosphate, I …
The Garage Chemist's user avatar