15 entries

Strong Acids and Strong Bases

The seven strong acids and eight strong bases that ionize completely in water. Essential for pH calculations and acid-base reaction predictions.

Name Formula Type Dissociation in Water Notes
Hydrochloric acidHClStrong acidHCl → H⁠+ + Cl⁠-Most common lab acid; found in stomach acid
Hydrobromic acidHBrStrong acidHBr → H⁠+ + Br⁠-Used in organic synthesis
Hydroiodic acidHIStrong acidHI → H⁠+ + I⁠-Strongest of the hydrohalic acids
Nitric acidHNO⁠3Strong acidHNO⁠3 → H⁠+ + NO⁠3-Oxidizing acid; reacts with metals below H in activity series
Sulfuric acidH⁠2SO⁠4Strong acidH⁠2SO⁠4 → H⁠+ + HSO⁠4-Diprotic; first dissociation is strong, second is weak (Ka₂ = 0.012)
Perchloric acidHClO⁠4Strong acidHClO⁠4 → H⁠+ + ClO⁠4-Strongest common acid in aqueous solution
Chloric acidHClO⁠3Strong acidHClO⁠3 → H⁠+ + ClO⁠3-Strong oxidizer; less common in labs
Lithium hydroxideLiOHStrong baseLiOH → Li⁠+ + OH⁠-Used in CO₂ scrubbers (spacecraft, submarines)
Sodium hydroxideNaOHStrong baseNaOH → Na⁠+ + OH⁠-Lye; most common strong base in labs and industry
Potassium hydroxideKOHStrong baseKOH → K⁠+ + OH⁠-Caustic potash; used in soap-making and batteries
Rubidium hydroxideRbOHStrong baseRbOH → Rb⁠+ + OH⁠-Rare; follows Group 1 pattern
Cesium hydroxideCsOHStrong baseCsOH → Cs⁠+ + OH⁠-Strongest Group 1 base; extremely hygroscopic
Calcium hydroxideCa(OH)⁠2Strong baseCa(OH)⁠2 → Ca⁠2+ + 2OH⁠-Slaked lime; limited solubility but fully dissociates what dissolves
Strontium hydroxideSr(OH)⁠2Strong baseSr(OH)⁠2 → Sr⁠2+ + 2OH⁠-Moderately soluble; used in sugar refining
Barium hydroxideBa(OH)⁠2Strong baseBa(OH)⁠2 → Ba⁠2+ + 2OH⁠-Used in titrations; forms clear solutions

Important Notes

  • "Strong" means the acid or base ionizes (dissociates) completely in dilute aqueous solution.
  • All other acids and bases are classified as weak — they only partially ionize in water.
  • Strong acids have very large Ka values (Ka → ∞), so the equilibrium lies completely to the right.
  • H₂SO₄ is diprotic: the first proton dissociates completely (strong), but the second has Ka₂ = 0.012 (weak).
  • Group 1 metal hydroxides are all strong bases and highly soluble. Group 2 hydroxides (Ca, Sr, Ba) are strong but have limited solubility.
  • Mg(OH)₂ is NOT a strong base — it is sparingly soluble and only weakly basic in solution.