Acid Stocks List

Related ETFs - A few ETFs which own one or more of the above listed Acid stocks.

Acid Stocks Recent News

Date Stock Title
May 30 NBY Gold Gains 1%; Best Buy Posts Upbeat Earnings
May 30 A Agilent (A) Q2 Earnings Beat Estimates, Revenues Fall Y/Y
May 30 A These Stocks Are Moving the Most Today: Salesforce, UiPath, Kohl’s, Foot Locker, Agilent, C3.ai, HP Inc., and More
May 30 A Q2 2024 Agilent Technologies Inc Earnings Call
May 30 RMTI Rockwell Medical Promotes Tim Chole to Chief Commercial Officer
May 30 BNR Burning Rock Biotech joins hands with Bayer to expand precision cancer therapies portfolio
May 30 A Salesforce, Kohl's and Agilent fall premarket; Foot Locker, Moderna rise
May 30 BNR Bayer and Burning Rock collaborate to increase patient access to precision cancer medicines
May 30 BNR Q1 2024 Burning Rock Biotech Ltd Earnings Call
May 30 A Agilent Technologies, Inc. (A) Q2 2024 Earnings Call Transcript
May 29 A Agilent (A) Reports Q2 Earnings: What Key Metrics Have to Say
May 29 A Agilent Technologies (A) Surpasses Q2 Earnings Estimates
May 29 A Agilent Technologies Stock Sinks After Company Cuts Guidance To Reflect Slower Market Recovery
May 29 A Agilent down 14% following revised 2024 guidance
May 29 A Agilent Technologies Fiscal Q2 Non-GAAP Earnings, Revenue Fall; Full Year Guidance Cut -- Shares Down After Hours
May 29 FF FutureFuel CEO McKinlay to retire in September
May 29 FF Tom McKinlay to Retire Effective September 30, 2024; FutureFuel Undertaking National Search for a New Chief Executive Officer
May 29 A Agilent Technologies Non-GAAP EPS of $1.22 beats by $0.03, revenue of $1.57B misses by $10M
May 29 A Agilent Reports Second-Quarter Fiscal Year 2024 Financial Results
May 29 BNR Burning Rock Biotech Limited (BNR) Q1 2024 Earnings Call Transcript
Acid

An acid is a molecule or ion capable of donating a hydron (proton or hydrogen ion H+), or, alternatively, capable of forming a covalent bond with an electron pair (a Lewis acid).The first category of acids is the proton donors or Brønsted acids. In the special case of aqueous solutions, proton donors form the hydronium ion H3O+ and are known as Arrhenius acids. Brønsted and Lowry generalized the Arrhenius theory to include non-aqueous solvents. A Brønsted or Arrhenius acid usually contains a hydrogen atom bonded to a chemical structure that is still energetically favorable after loss of H+.
Aqueous Arrhenius acids have characteristic properties which provide a practical description of an acid. Acids form aqueous solutions with a sour taste, can turn blue litmus red, and react with bases and certain metals (like calcium) to form salts. The word acid is derived from the Latin acidus/acēre meaning sour. An aqueous solution of an acid has a pH less than 7 and is colloquially also referred to as 'acid' (as in 'dissolved in acid'), while the strict definition refers only to the solute. A lower pH means a higher acidity, and thus a higher concentration of positive hydrogen ions in the solution. Chemicals or substances having the property of an acid are said to be acidic.
Common aqueous acids include hydrochloric acid (a solution of hydrogen chloride which is found in gastric acid in the stomach and activates digestive enzymes), acetic acid (vinegar is a dilute aqueous solution of this liquid), sulfuric acid (used in car batteries), and citric acid (found in citrus fruits). As these examples show, acids (in the colloquial sense) can be solutions or pure substances, and can be derived from acids (in the strict sense) that are solids, liquids, or gases. Strong acids and some concentrated weak acids are corrosive, but there are exceptions such as carboranes and boric acid.
The second category of acids are Lewis acids, which form a covalent bond with an electron pair. An example is boron trifluoride (BF3), whose boron atom has a vacant orbital which can form a covalent bond by sharing a lone pair of electrons on an atom in a base, for example the nitrogen atom in ammonia (NH3). Lewis considered this as a generalization of the Brønsted definition, so that an acid is a chemical species that accepts electron pairs either directly or by releasing protons (H+) into the solution, which then accept electron pairs. However, hydrogen chloride, acetic acid, and most other Brønsted-Lowry acids cannot form a covalent bond with an electron pair and are therefore not Lewis acids. Conversely, many Lewis acids are not Arrhenius or Brønsted-Lowry acids. In modern terminology, an acid is implicitly a Brønsted acid and not a Lewis acid, since chemists almost always refer to a Lewis acid explicitly as a Lewis acid.

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