Dilute Household Ammonia or just normal ammonia would do the job.
Water or any neutral solution
Things with a neutral pH.
This is a weak base solution.
i dont no
citric acid
A base turns the universal indicator blue or u can say a alkali substance.
It means that the substance tested is neutral.
a substance which is classified as neutral has a ph of 7- using universal indicator this will result in green. an acid is anything from ph1 to ph6 depending on the concentration of the acid, to neutralise an acid from a ph of 6 or below an alkali is required, so when an acid turns neutral it has either reacted with an alkaline substance or has a higher ph
A change of color specific for acids, red-brown for Merck pH indicators.
You add universal indicator and then compare the colour it turns to an example ph scale. The redder the Ui the more acidic it will be, if it is green it will be neutral and if it is blue/purple it will be alkali.
A base turns the universal indicator blue or u can say a alkali substance.
It means that the substance tested is neutral.
there is no acid present
Neutral is a word that describes a chemical which turns a universal indicator green. This chemical has a pH equal to 7.0 on the pH scale.
it turns neutral (green)
It turns green on neutralisation reaction.
It turns the universal indicator red
It turns the universal indicator purple or blue.
Dilute Household Ammonia or just normal ammonia would do the job.
The gas that turns a universal indicator blue is usually chlorine.
It turns the universal indicator to scale 1
Universal Indicator turns concentrated HCl red because Universal Indicator turns strong acids reds.