It is usually straight-forward. If the chemical has acid in it, then it is an acid.
So, citric acid, is an acid.
No, grapefruit is acidic (citric acid).
It is an acid on the pH scale. It is found in fruits with citric acid.
Sodium citrate solution is basic.
No. Citric acid is an organic acid
I dare say that all fruit juices are acidic mixtures; lemon juice contains citric acid, which is an almost a strong, three-fold acid.
An acid, Citric acid to be precise.
No, grapefruit is acidic (citric acid).
Oranges contain citric acid, and are considered acidic.
0.6-1.2% of Pineapple is acid of which 87% is Citric acid and 13% is Malic acid. Pineapple has a pH of 3.71 and an acidity of 53.3% (Tannic acid. - this was the previous answer )
It is an acid, a weak acid.
It is an acid on the pH scale. It is found in fruits with citric acid.
Being a citric fruit the juice is acidic.
The conguate base of citric acid - citrate - is an important intermediate in the cycle. This is where the name "Citric Acid Cycle" comes from. It is also known as the Tricarboxylic Acid Cycle - as it involves 3 carbon acids, or the Krebs Cycle after Hans Adolf Krebs - who developed the complexities of the cycle.
Sodium citrate solution is basic.
Orange juice contains citric acid, which makes it acidic.
No. Citric acid is an organic acid
I dare say that all fruit juices are acidic mixtures; lemon juice contains citric acid, which is an almost a strong, three-fold acid.