What acid has the strongest base.?
Answer:
Water's conjugate base is the hydroxide ion, so you might consider water to have the strongest base.
generally, strong acid have weak bases, and weak acids have strong bases - so find the weakest acid.
acids and bases are complete opposites, your question makes no sense at all...
I don't know. So if you want "the" answer stop here. If you want to know why your question is unsophisticated and unanswerable read on. Acidity can mean different things in different contexts. Do you mean Lewis acidity or Bronsted?
Aqueous solution, pure compund? vapor state? or in some other solvent? At 75°F, 0°K or 3000°C?
Perhaps now you can see why your question is unsophisticated:it suggests that there is only one answer when there are many. Since the "strongest" base will have an acid form your question is "what is the strongest base?"
Since we may choose to define a base as an electron acceptor we can easily come up with several answers:
1. Ununquaternium nucleus (naked) Uuq(+114) (30 second half-life)
2. Any massive black hole
both of these will rip the electrons off any known material so depending whether you're looking for something you can actually work with in the lab (or, like these two, not) we can answer your question with all sorts of silliness. "Like for like" so to speak. Anyway, to get back to a chemical answer to your question. It depends on how you define base strength. There is not one universally accepted scale of acidity (or basicity) so you should not be surprised to learn there is no agreement on what the "strongest" or "weakest" means, let alone what material qualifies as having that attribute.
Cyclohexane
2-methylpropane, at the 2-position.
Bicyclo[2.2.2]octane at the bridgehead.
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