Hydrogen ion: Difference between revisions
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A [[Hydrogen| | A [[Hydrogen|hydrogen]] [[Ion|ion]] is formed when a hydrogen [[Atom|atom]] loses an [[Electron|electron]] and therefore becomes positively charged (it has a charge of +1). A hydrogen atom is therefore often referred to as just a [[Proton|proton]], as it is left with only one proton and no electrons, as a H atom only has one of each. <sup></sup>Hydrogen ion can also be written as H<sup>+</sup>. | ||
== pH == | === pH === | ||
pH is a measure of an atoms ability to dissociate from a | [[PH|pH]] is a measure of an atoms ability to dissociate from a hydrogen ion. The more easily it does this, and consequently the higher the concentration of hydrogen ions in a solution, the lower the pH. Substances with a pH lower than 7 are known as [[Acid|acidic]]. Consequently, hydrogen ions are important to any reaction dealing with acids and bases, and as such are extremely important to chemistry. |
Latest revision as of 17:45, 18 October 2018
A hydrogen ion is formed when a hydrogen atom loses an electron and therefore becomes positively charged (it has a charge of +1). A hydrogen atom is therefore often referred to as just a proton, as it is left with only one proton and no electrons, as a H atom only has one of each. Hydrogen ion can also be written as H+.
pH
pH is a measure of an atoms ability to dissociate from a hydrogen ion. The more easily it does this, and consequently the higher the concentration of hydrogen ions in a solution, the lower the pH. Substances with a pH lower than 7 are known as acidic. Consequently, hydrogen ions are important to any reaction dealing with acids and bases, and as such are extremely important to chemistry.