Base anhydride

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The oxides of Group I and II metals (Alkali metals and Alkali earth metals) are called base anhydrides. They are obtained by removing water from the corresponding hydroxide salt. If water is added to a base anhydride, a corresponding hydroxide base can be re-formed. A base anhydride is neither an Arrhenius base, nor a Brønsted–Lowry Base, since it does not accept protons and do not increase the hydroxide ion concentration of water. However, a base anhydride is a Lewis Base, since it will share an electron pair with some Lewis acids, most notably acidic oxides.[1]

Examples

This list is incomplete; you can help by expanding it.

See also

Acidic oxide

References

  1. Principles of Modern Chemistry, 7th Edition. David Oxtoby, H. P. Gillis, Alan Campion. Published by Cengage Learning. Page 675-676. ISBN 978-0840049315



This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike; additional terms may apply for the media files.