Yes. Hydrogen loses an electron to become positive during bonding.quick question,
do all acids contain hydrogen
and when writing net ionic equations(for acids and metals) is the hydrogen ion always positive ?
OP's in Year 11 haha.While acids do contain a H+ ion, be careful on how you define it. Currently, the accepted theory is Bronsted-Lowry, where an acid is defined as being able to donate a proton (H+).
for simiplicity, yes all acids contain hydrogen (this definition will probably suffice for year 11) however, the below definition is more correct but you won't meet this until year 12. And yes, the hydrogen ion is always positive.quick question,
do all acids contain hydrogen
and when writing net ionic equations(for acids and metals) is the hydrogen ion always positive ?
While acids do contain a H+ ion, be careful on how you define it. Currently, the accepted theory is Bronsted-Lowry, where an acid is defined as being able to donate a proton (H+).