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. 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.

  6. Acid strength - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Acid_strength

    Acid strength is the tendency of an acid, symbolised by the chemical formula, to dissociate into a proton, +, and an anion, .The dissociation or ionization of a strong acid in solution is effectively complete, except in its most concentrated solutions.

  7. Double salt - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Double_salt

    Double salts are distinct from mixed-crystal systems where two salts cocrystallise; [2] the former involves a chemical combination with fixed composition, whereas the latter is a mixture. [3] In general, the properties of the double salt formed will not be the same as the properties of its component single salts.

  8. Hypoiodous acid - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hypoiodous_acid

    Hypoiodous acid is a weak acid with a pK a of about 11. The conjugate base is hypoiodite (IO −). Salts of this anion can be prepared by treating iodine with alkali hydroxides. They rapidly disproportionate to form iodides and iodates, [2] but an iodine–hydroxide mixture can be used an in situ preparation of hypoiodite for other reactions. [3]

  9. Acid–base reaction - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Acid–base_reaction

    In chemistry, an acid–base reaction is a chemical reaction that occurs between an acid and a base.It can be used to determine pH via titration.Several theoretical frameworks provide alternative conceptions of the reaction mechanisms and their application in solving related problems; these are called the acid–base theories, for example, Brønsted–Lowry acid–base theory.