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An average human body cell has an alkaline pH. This means it is above 7. Normally, a human cell will average 7.35-7.45 on the pH scale.
Personally no. I'd imagine enzymes throughout the body have environments that have varying pH levels. Although, pH is how many hydrogen+ ions there are. Many cells in the body may have the same or very similar pH levels but some parts of the human body may have higher or lower levels, meaning that the optimum pH for the enzyme depending on which part of the body it catalyses within.
3 pH within the suger walls...
no. Not only do different human bodies have different pH, but different parts of the same body have different pH also. There are a variety of different chemical environments within a single body.
Your gastric fluid is a 1 on the pH scale, being extremely acidic, blood and tears are about a 7 .
A normal pH level in the human body is about 7.4, fairly neutral. The pH of skin in an adult should be around 5.4.
A normal pH level in the human body is about 7.4, fairly neutral. The pH of skin in an adult should be around 5.4.
Yes. It's 7.35-7.45
The normal PH level in human body cells is between 7.35-7.45. When it becomes 7.2 it is acidic (acidosis) When it becomes 7.0 it results in death
Ever body part has a different pH. The pH of blood should be 7.4. The pH of gastric acids in your stomach is 2-3. The pH or urine is around neutral 7.
The highest number on the pH scale is 14. The pH scale goes from 0 to 14.
That makes no sense