enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Iodic acid - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Iodic_acid

    Iodic acid is a white water-soluble solid with the chemical formula HIO 3. Its robustness contrasts with the instability of chloric acid and bromic acid. Iodic acid features iodine in the oxidation state +5 and is one of the most stable oxo-acids of the halogens. When heated, samples dehydrate to give iodine pentoxide. On further heating, the ...

  3. Hydrogen iodide - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hydrogen_iodide

    Hydrogen iodide (HI) is a diatomic molecule and hydrogen halide. Aqueous solutions of HI are known as hydroiodic acid or hydriodic acid, a strong acid.Hydrogen iodide and hydroiodic acid are, however, different in that the former is a gas under standard conditions, whereas the other is an aqueous solution of the gas.

  4. Hydroiodic acid - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hydroiodic_acid

    Hydroiodic acid (or hydriodic acid) is a colorless liquid. It is an aqueous solution of hydrogen iodide with the chemical formula H I. It is a strong acid, in which hydrogen iodide is ionized completely in an aqueous solution. Concentrated aqueous solutions of hydrogen iodide are usually 48% to 57% HI by mass. [2] An oxidized solution of ...

  5. Iodine compounds - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Iodine_compounds

    Commercially, it is usually made by reacting iodine with hydrogen sulfide or hydrazine: [4] 2 I 2 + N 2 H 4 4 HI + N 2. At room temperature, it is a colourless gas, like all of the hydrogen halides except hydrogen fluoride, since hydrogen cannot form strong hydrogen bonds to the large and only mildly electronegative iodine atom. It melts at − ...

  6. Iodate - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Iodate

    [4] [5] It is also one of the iodine compounds used to make iodized salt. [6] Potassium hydrogen iodate (or potassium biiodate), KH(IO 3) 2, is a double salt of potassium iodate and iodic acid, as well as an acid itself. When some oxygen is replaced by fluorine, fluoroiodates are produced.

  7. Iodine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Iodine

    Unlike chlorates, which disproportionate very slowly to form chloride and perchlorate, iodates are stable to disproportionation in both acidic and alkaline solutions. From these, salts of most metals can be obtained. Iodic acid is most easily made by oxidation of an aqueous iodine suspension by electrolysis or fuming nitric acid. Iodate has the ...

  8. Acid strength - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Acid_strength

    A compound which is a weak acid in water may become a strong acid in DMSO. Acetic acid is an example of such a substance. An extensive bibliography of p K a {\displaystyle \mathrm {p} K_{{\ce {a}}}} values in solution in DMSO and other solvents can be found at Acidity–Basicity Data in Nonaqueous Solvents .

  9. Hypoiodous acid - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hypoiodous_acid

    Hypoiodous acid is an inorganic compound with the chemical formula H I O. It forms when an aqueous solution of iodine is treated with mercuric or silver salts. It rapidly decomposes by disproportionation: [2] 5 HIO → HIO 3 + 2 I 2 + 2 H 2 O. Hypoiodous acid is a weak acid with a pK a of about 11. The conjugate base is hypoiodite (IO −).