HCl is the most volatile halogen acid.
not sure but i think that a halogen acid is an acid like HCl and an acid halide is like 1-chloro ethanoic acid
No. Carbonic acid is never a strong acid.
Hydrobromic Acid is HBr. Diatomic acids are typically hydrogen combined with a halogen. For nominal purposes, it's usually the prefix "hydro-" with the root of the halogen, but instead of having "-ine" at the end you have "-ic." HBr -> Hydrobromic acid HCl -> Hydrochloric acid HI -> Hydroiodic acid
All hydrogen halides except for hydrofluoric acid are strong acids and so are among the strongest of acids.
No, they are different compounds, but are in the same group(i.e. acids)
Ascorbic acid is not volatile.
No one fatty acid is volatile.
not sure but i think that a halogen acid is an acid like HCl and an acid halide is like 1-chloro ethanoic acid
Volatile, Monoprotic and Oxidizing acid
No. Carbonic acid is never a strong acid.
Halogen oxides are acid forming, most of which are strong