Hi,
My textbook (Facer, A2 Chemistry - used for UK EdExcel specification) states on page 36 that Silicon Dioxide is a weakly acidic oxide because of the following reaction
SiO
2 + 2NaOH <> Na
2SiO
3 + H
2O (where <> represents the symbol "reversible")
Now, OK, I can see that the reaction is silicon dioxide plus an alkali gives water and a compound (sodium silicate?) that looks "salt-like"
However, everything I have read to date about acids (ignoring Lewis) states an acid is a proton donor.
My problem: where is the H
+ in SiO
2 ? Because there isn't an H
+, how can SiO
2 be an acid - even if its reaction with an alkali generates a salt ?
Salts, acids, bases
Clive