Respuesta :

Answer:

The hydroxide ion [tex]\rm OH^{-}[/tex] is the conjugate base in this equation.

Explanation:

The acid and base in a conjugate pair differ only by a proton [tex]\rm H^{+}[/tex]. As the Bronsted-Lowry acid-base theory goes, the substance with that extra proton [tex]\rm H^{+}[/tex] is considered to be the acid. The other substance in the pair is considered to be the base.

In this reaction, there are two conjugate acid-base pairs:

[tex]\rm {NO_2}^{-} + H^{+} \to HNO_2[/tex]:

  • Base: [tex]\rm {NO_2}^{-}[/tex], which accepts a proton;
  • Acid: [tex]\rm HNO_2[/tex].

[tex]\rm H_2O \to OH^{-} + H^{+}[/tex]:

  • Acid: [tex]\rm H_2O[/tex], which supplies a proton;
  • Base: [tex]\rm OH^{-}[/tex].

By convention, an acid A reacts with a base B to produce

  • a conjugate base of A, and
  • a conjugate acid of B.

In other words,

[tex]\text{Acid A} + \text{Base B} \to \text{Conjugate Base of A} + \text{Conjugate Acid of B}[/tex].

For this reaction,

  • Acid A is [tex]\rm H_2O[/tex], and
  • Base B is [tex]\rm {NO_2}^{-}[/tex].

On the right-hand side of the equation:

  • The Conjugate Base of A is [tex]\rm OH^{-}[/tex], and
  • The Conjugate Acid of B is [tex]\rm HNO_2[/tex].