vinegar, lemon juice, Orange Juice, apple, batterie acid.
Things like soap, bleach and most household cleaners are NOT acids, most are bases.
vegtable oil,olive oil and household cleaning products
Neither is acidic, both are basic. But milk of magnesia is less basic and therefore more acidic.
Cl2O7 + H2O = 2 HClO4 an acidic solution
Pure water is the standard for a neutral fluid (neither acidic or basic.) Ammonia is a basic solution.
The pH of acetic acid is 5. The acetic acid is widely used in the food products. It has much of the importance in the industrial chemical reactions also . The acetic acid is widely used in the chemistry labs. The dilute form of the acetic acid is an edible form and can be used in many of the food products for preservation also.
The Acid-Base ContinuumThe acidity or basically of a solution is expressed as a pH score (pH stands for "potential of hydrogen"). Acids test low, as a pH of 0-7, with 0 being the most acidic. Bases test high, as a pH of 7-14, with 14 being the most basic. Water is neutral, at 7.Litmus PaperWe began this discussion referring to the taste and smell of acids and bases. But as a rule, DON'T TASTE OR SMELL a solution for testing purposes. Some household chemicals, such as ammonia, are toxic and even smelling them deeply could make you swoon. Others, like lemon juice, are safe to ingest, but very unpleasant. Litmus paper is one of the oldest methods used to test the acidity or basicity of a solution. Blue litmus paper turns red when put in an acidic solution. Red litmus paper turns blue when put in a basic solution. Neutral litmus paper is purple and stays that way when you put it in water, which is neutral.Common Household Acidic SolutionsVinegar and lemon juice are the classic household solutions used in school chemistry lessons for testing acids. Other citrus fruits such as grapefruit, limes and oranges are also acidic. Wine is acidic, as are most carbonated beverages.Common Household Basic SolutionsPour baking soda into water and you have a basic solution. Ammonia and washing soda are also bases, as is hydrogen peroxide. Milk of magnesia, a medicine for easing stomach acid, is a base. So is household chlorine bleach. (But don't try to test it with litmus paper. It will just turn it white.) Blood is slightly basic, so most meat products are, too.Mixing or Neutralizing Acids and BasesIf you mix a strong acid such as vinegar with a strong base such as baking soda, they will react rather explosively. (They form the main ingredients for homemade "volcanoes.") The resulting compound will be a salt, which is neutral. This reactive quality of acids and bases is one reason why cleaning supplies often carry a warning not to mix solutions because if you mix acidic and basic solutions, the result can produce toxic fumes.
when a small amount of vinegar or lemon juice is added in water it becomes acidic
both, things like soaps are basic and things like toilet bowl cleaners are acidic.
products that have acidic acids are products such as: gentlemens bits and hats
No, ammonia is basic.
It depends on the cleaner, those containing sodium hypochlorite or ammonia are basic, while others, such as those containing vinegar or citrus products are acidic.
Neither is acidic, both are basic. But milk of magnesia is less basic and therefore more acidic.
Lemons, limes, greapfruit, oranges, vinegar.
Hot sauce contains several acidic products.
acidic acid is the nucleic level found on sodas or cleaning products and do forth. its all acidic but the higher the acidic level is ITS LESS ACIDIC then lower number.
They're classified according to their pH level.
Basic
because it can!