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13 February, 06:38

If you place a strong acid in water it will likely ionize. If you put the same acid in oil it will not. Why the difference?

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  1. 13 February, 10:35
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    An acid that breaks down completely and gives off many ions, or protons, is considered to be a strong acid. ex H₂SO₄

    If you place strong acid into water it dissociate acid into H⁺ ions

    Water is polar solvent (H⁺ and OH⁻), which has partial positive charge on one side and partial negative charge on the other side.

    Strong acids readily dissociate in polar solvents to give H + ions.

    Where as Oil is a non polar solvent it has same charge all over so no dissociation of strong acid will take place.
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