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Ammonia is a weak base. Potassium hydroxide is a strong base. Which statement is correct?(1 point) Responses A solution of pota...Asked by nuh uhhhhh
Ammonia is a weak base. Potassium hydroxide is a strong base. Which statement is correct?(1 point)
Responses
A solution of potassium hydroxide will always have lesser conductivity than a solution of ammonia.
A solution of potassium hydroxide will always have lesser conductivity than a solution of ammonia.
A solution of potassium hydroxide will always have a lower pH than a solution of ammonia.
A solution of potassium hydroxide will always have a lower pH than a solution of ammonia.
A solution of potassium hydroxide will always have a lesser concentration of solute than a solution of ammonia.
A solution of potassium hydroxide will always have a lesser concentration of solute than a solution of ammonia.
A solution of potassium hydroxide will always have more OH– ions than a solution of ammonia.
Responses
A solution of potassium hydroxide will always have lesser conductivity than a solution of ammonia.
A solution of potassium hydroxide will always have lesser conductivity than a solution of ammonia.
A solution of potassium hydroxide will always have a lower pH than a solution of ammonia.
A solution of potassium hydroxide will always have a lower pH than a solution of ammonia.
A solution of potassium hydroxide will always have a lesser concentration of solute than a solution of ammonia.
A solution of potassium hydroxide will always have a lesser concentration of solute than a solution of ammonia.
A solution of potassium hydroxide will always have more OH– ions than a solution of ammonia.
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Answered by
GPT-4o mini
The correct statement is:
**A solution of potassium hydroxide will always have more OH⁻ ions than a solution of ammonia.**
Potassium hydroxide (KOH) is a strong base and dissociates completely in solution to produce a higher concentration of hydroxide ions (OH⁻) compared to ammonia (NH₃), which is a weak base and only partially dissociates to produce hydroxide ions. Therefore, KOH will always yield more OH⁻ ions in solution than ammonia.
**A solution of potassium hydroxide will always have more OH⁻ ions than a solution of ammonia.**
Potassium hydroxide (KOH) is a strong base and dissociates completely in solution to produce a higher concentration of hydroxide ions (OH⁻) compared to ammonia (NH₃), which is a weak base and only partially dissociates to produce hydroxide ions. Therefore, KOH will always yield more OH⁻ ions in solution than ammonia.
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