Is NH+4 an acid or a base?

1 Answer
Nov 25, 2015

More often than not, an acid. It donates a proton by accepting two electrons. For instance:

NH+4(aq)+H2O(l)NH3(aq)+H3O+(aq)

Here:

Ammonium is the acid, donating the proton to water (Bronsted-Lowry definition) by accepting two electrons (Lewis definition) from water's oxygen.

Water is the base, donating two electrons (Lewis definition) from oxygen to accept one proton (Bronsted-Lowry definition) from ammonium.