Dilute nitric acid behaves pretty much like an ordinary acid most of the time. Remember - acids don't become "weak" because you dilute them or
"strong" because you concentrate them, at least not in the chemical sense. The strength of an acid depends on how readily it dissociates its protons
when in aqueous solutions, not how corrosive or reactive it is. For example: HF can dissolve glass and is very toxic, but as an acid it's not
particularly strong. (Read up on acid strength and pKa values of acids for more information on this).
Hydrogen peroxide is indeed a very weak acid because a very small percentage of its molecules can give off the protons in solutions. The exact
opposite is true for nitric acid - it's very strong, so in solutions it is mostly dissociated and few of its molecules remain associated. Dilute
solutions of nitric acid furthermore tend to lose many of their strong oxidizing features (it is still somewhat oxidizing, but not to the same extent
as in concentrated solutions). |