- autoprotolysis
- au·to·pro·tol·y·sis (aw″to-pro-tolґĭ-sis) proton transfer from one molecule to another of the same substance.
Medical dictionary. 2011.
Medical dictionary. 2011.
autoprotolysis — autoprotolizė statusas T sritis chemija apibrėžtis Reakcija, kurios metu tirpiklio molekulės reaguoja viena su kita ir susidaro jonai. atitikmenys: angl. autoprotolysis rus. автопротолиз … Chemijos terminų aiškinamasis žodynas
autoprotolysis — noun The autoionization of water (or similar compounds) in which a proton (hydrogen ion) is transferred to form a cation and an anion e.g. 2HO => HO + OH See Also: protolysis … Wiktionary
Sulfuric acid — Sulfuric acid … Wikipedia
oxyacid — /ok see as id/, n. Chem. an inorganic acid containing oxygen. Also called oxygen acid. [1830 40; OXY 2 + ACID] * * * ▪ chemical compound Introduction any oxygen containing acid. Most covalent nonmetallic oxides (oxide) react with water to… … Universalium
Nitric acid — Nitric acid … Wikipedia
Self-ionization of water — The self ionization of water (also autoionization of water, and autodissociation of water) is the chemical reaction in which two water molecules react to produce a hydronium (H3O+) and a hydroxide ion (OH−):: 2 H2O (l) ightleftharpoons H3O+ (aq)… … Wikipedia
Autoprotolyse — Une autoprotolyse est une réaction de transfert de proton entre deux molécules identiques, l une jouant le rôle d acide au sens de Bronsted et l autre celui de base[1]. Sommaire 1 Écriture générale 2 Autoproto … Wikipédia en Français
acid–base reaction — ▪ chemistry Introduction a type of chemical process typified by the exchange of one or more hydrogen ions, H+, between species that may be neutral (molecules, such as water, H2O; or acetic acid, CH3CO2H) or electrically charged (ions, such… … Universalium
Kw — Symbol for autoprotolysis constant of water. * * * Keith Wagener [ophthalmoscopic finding]; Kimmelstiel Wilson [syndrome]; Kugelberg Welander [syndrome] kilowatt * * * ion product of water; see under product … Medical dictionary
Schikorr reaction — iron(II) hydroxide, Fe(OH)2, the start reagent of the Schikorr reaction … Wikipedia