Not unless they're releasing ions into the water, in which case they'll eventually either a) run out and stop doing that or b) dissolve away completely. This sounds like it might relate to the "laundry balls" that are commonly sold to the gullible. Any effect these might have is purely mechanical (basically the same principle as an old washboard).
litmus test is the easiest one.blue litmus will turn into red.
ph 8- p14 is a alkali. blue for weak alkali (ph 8) purple for strong alkali (ph14)
What happens is that first if you put an acid indicator and a sulphuric acid it will turn red but if you add another solution it will turn a different colour. and if you add acid and alkali together then it will turn into salt and H2O xxx
It will turn green! :)
Every alkali solution above 7 pH at 298 K would turn red litmus into blue.
litmus test is the easiest one.blue litmus will turn into red.
no they are inedible toy beads that swell in water
ph 8- p14 is a alkali. blue for weak alkali (ph 8) purple for strong alkali (ph14)
It will neutralise the alkali and then turn the liquid to an acid.
it depends on what is in the alkali, sodium, calcium, lithium all turn different colours, I believe lithium turns purple, an alkali is a compound with hydroxide ie sodium hydroxide is NaOH
What happens is that first if you put an acid indicator and a sulphuric acid it will turn red but if you add another solution it will turn a different colour. and if you add acid and alkali together then it will turn into salt and H2O xxx
It will turn green! :)
Every alkali solution above 7 pH at 298 K would turn red litmus into blue.
Green
Orange
Litmus paper is neutral and has a PH of 7 o adding an alkali will turn it purple and adding an acid will turn it red-pink.
For an acid, the solution remains colourless or unchanged. For an alkali, it would turn fuschia.