The essence of Brønsted–Lowry theory is that an acid is only such in relation to a base, and
vice versa. Water is
amphoteric as it can act as an acid or as a base. In the image shown at the right one molecule of acts as a base and gains to become while the other acts as an acid and loses to become . Another example is illustrated by substances like
aluminium hydroxide, . :\overset{(acid)}{Al(OH)3}{} + OH- Al(OH)4^- :3H+{} + \overset{(base)}{Al(OH)3} 3H2O{} + Al_{(aq)}^3+
Non-aqueous solutions The hydrogen ion, or hydronium ion, is a Brønsted–Lowry acid when dissolved in H2O and the hydroxide ion is a base because of the
autoionization of water reaction :H2O + H2O H3O+ + OH- An
analogousreaction occurs in
liquid ammonia :NH3 + NH3 NH4+ + NH2- Thus, the ammonium ion, , in liquid ammonia corresponds to the hydronium ion in water and the amide ion, in ammonia, to the hydroxide ion in water.
Ammonium salts behave as acids, and metal
amides behave as bases. Some non-aqueous solvents can behave as bases, i.e. accept protons, in relation to Brønsted–Lowry acids. :HA + S A- + SH+ where S stands for a solvent molecule. The most important of such solvents are
dimethylsulfoxide, DMSO, and
acetonitrile, , as these solvents have been widely used to measure the
acid dissociation constants of carbon-containing molecules. Because DMSO accepts protons more strongly than the acid becomes stronger in this solvent than in water. Indeed, many molecules behave as acids in non-aqueous solutions but not in aqueous solutions. An extreme case occurs with
carbon acids, where a proton is extracted from a bond. Some non-aqueous solvents can behave as acids. An acidic solvent will make dissolved substances more basic. For example, the compound is known as
acetic acid since it behaves as an acid in water. However, it behaves as a base in liquid
hydrogen fluoride, a much more acidic solvent. :CH3COOH + 2HF CH3C(OH)2+ + HF2- == Comparison with Lewis acid–base theory==