Googled it, alot of different sources saying different things, but I'd still opt my answer to be correct.minijumbuk said:No, he's wrong. HCl is stronger.
The first ionisation of H2SO4 is strong, and the 2nd is weak.
HCl has only got 1 ionisation, and it is strong, so overall HCl is stronger.
But in the same conc. and volume of acids, H2SO4 would have more H+ ions.
I doubt they'd give you a question on this. But when they give you calculation questions involving H2SO4, assume both ionisations are strong.
Creelman should have answers. What'd it say?alez said:so its HCl?
and I did get a question asking which one was stronger, from the creelman book
fuck
wikipedia said:A strong acid is an acid that ionizes completely in an aqueous solution (not in the case of sulfuric acid as it is diprotic), or in other terms, with a pKa < −1.74.
Some common strong acids (as ionizers)
(Strongest to the weakest)
* Perchloric acid HClO4
* Hydroiodic acid HI
* Hydrobromic acid HBr
* Hydrochloric acid HCl
* Sulfuric acid H2SO4 (Ka1/first dissociation only)
* Nitric acid HNO3
* Hydronium ion H3O+ or H+. For purposes of simplicity, H3O+ is often replaced in a chemical equation with H+. However, it should be noted that a bare proton simply does not exist in water but instead is bound to one of the lone pairs of electrons on the H2O molecule. This creates the hydronium ion and gives its single O atom a formal charge of +1.
* Some chemists include chloric acid (HClO3), bromic acid (HBrO3), perbromic acid (HBrO4), iodic acid (HIO3), and periodic acid (HIO4) as strong acids, although these are not universally accepted.
wow ownage. id still like to know what the answer in the textbook was @@minijumbuk said:
ua answer is very right this is because if u consider brownted an lowry acid base theory that stronger acids would be more like to produce very weak conjugate bases that wouldnt undergo further reaction i.e: HCl+H2O-->Cl- +H3O+ while H2SO4 is diprotic thus: H2SO4 + H20---> H30+ +HSO4- but its conjugates base becomes amphroprotic showing that it then act as either a base or an acid on the next stage therefore showing that H2SO4 is weaker than HCl since its conjugate is a bit stronger.minijumbuk said:No, he's wrong. HCl is stronger.
The first ionisation of H2SO4 is strong, and the 2nd is weak.
HCl has only got 1 ionisation, and it is strong, so overall HCl is stronger.
But in the same conc. and volume of acids, H2SO4 would have more H+ ions.
I doubt they'd give you a question on this. But when they give you calculation questions involving H2SO4, assume both ionisations are strong.
WTF? You might be right, or wrong; but it'd be super great if you didn't violate the English language while you're at it.samwell said:ua answer is very right this is because if u consider brownted an lowry acid base theory that stronger acids would be more like to produce very weak conjugate bases that wouldnt undergo further reaction i.e: HCl+H2O-->Cl- +H3O+ while H2SO4 is diprotic thus: H2SO4 + H20---> H30+ +HSO4- but its conjugates base becomes amphroprotic showing that it then act as either a base or an acid on the next stage therefore showing that H2SO4 is weaker than HCl since its conjugate is a bit stronger.
Both are strong acids. True.alez said:So is it HCl? this is so confusing me
No.ok question 22b in the 2002 HSC, HCl and H2SO4 both with a conc of 0.01mol/L
compare the pH of the two and justify.
The answer is no help, it says that H2SO4 has the lower pH because H2SO4 has a higher [H+], and is diprotic so a second [H+] can break away
but dont they have the same [H+]?