distilled water property

  • Catelite
    20th Aug 2010 Former Staff 0 Permalink
    It really doesn't make the slightest difference. The game's supposed to be entertaining, not physically correct.
  • HolyExLxF
    20th Aug 2010 Member 0 Permalink
    Distilled water is completely neutral.
    You say you have learned chemistry, but you have said nothing about the autoionization of water.
    In distilled water [H+] = 1.0e-7 and [OH-] = 1.0e-7. pH and pOH are both 7. Which is neutral.
    I've seen you post a few times about chemistry, Rconover, and you are almost exclusively wrong in ever topic (by the way, your comment is impertinent to the discussion).

    Also triclops200, sulfuric acid is not an ionic compound; I don't know where you learned that.
  • Rconover
    20th Aug 2010 Member 0 Permalink
    HolyExLxF
    >_> LoL no, name these topics where I am wrong about the chemistry related topic

    all this thread is is high school chemistry.
  • thebagleboy
    20th Aug 2010 Member 0 Permalink
    @triclops200
    ionic compound = compound with an ionic bond
    ionic bond = bond between metal & nonmetal
    neither hydrogen (H), Sulfure (S), nor oxygen (O) is metal
    Also the reason I made this post:
    Chemically, water is amphoteric: it can act as either an acid or a base in chemical reactions. According to the Brønsted-Lowry definition, an acid is defined as a species which donates a proton (a H+ ion) in a reaction, and a base as one which receives a proton.
  • triclops200
    20th Aug 2010 Former Staff 0 Permalink
    I know what an Ionic compound is and I relize that's what ionic compounds are, I was wrong and I forgot about that. . But that is how water makes compounds acidic is the composition into H3O (Hydronium) from the donation of a H+ ion .
  • erwins_cat
    20th Aug 2010 Member 0 Permalink
    acidic in RL and acidic in PT are different things ...
    in PT acid eats other particles. literally, the other particles vanish. in RL this can't happen (conservation of mass etc).
    and btw: pure water (only perfect H2O) can't be acidic in the first place. the only thing that can happen is H2O -> H+ + OH- (see autoionisation)
  • triclops200
    20th Aug 2010 Former Staff 0 Permalink
    I know , just getting a little off-topic here. and that H+ ion makes H3O.