HOH, more commonly shown as H2O or water is generally considered neutral.
But technically it is an amphoteric substance, meaning it can act as both an acid and a base.
In acid base neutralisation, both the acid and the base react with each other to form salt and water. Ex: hcl+naoh --> nacl + hoh here, acid-hcl base-naoh salt-nacl water-hoh
An acid plus a base will yield a salt and water. In textbooks this is often written as: HA + BOH yields AB + HOH The above means an acid with its hydronium ion added to a base with its hydroxyl group will yield a salt composed of the acid and the base plus water (hydrogen plus hydroxyl is HOH or H2O).
Its an acid since it has a positive hydrogen ion. This is know because the polyatomic OH its charge is -1 and to balance the charge you'd need +1 being the hydrogen Actually HOH is another common form of writing H2O (pure water). Since water has pH level of 7, it is neutral, neither a base, nor an acid.
The word neutralization means theproduct is neutral. Acid + base = Salt(neutral) + water HCl + NaOH = NaCl + HOH Hydrochloric acid + Sodium hydroxide = Salt + water
a base. for example, NaOH will because it is a base, but don't forget, bases are ionic compounds. so HOH wouldn't turn it pink. hope this helps!
In acid base neutralisation, both the acid and the base react with each other to form salt and water. Ex: hcl+naoh --> nacl + hoh here, acid-hcl base-naoh salt-nacl water-hoh
An acid plus a base will yield a salt and water. In textbooks this is often written as: HA + BOH yields AB + HOH The above means an acid with its hydronium ion added to a base with its hydroxyl group will yield a salt composed of the acid and the base plus water (hydrogen plus hydroxyl is HOH or H2O).
Its an acid since it has a positive hydrogen ion. This is know because the polyatomic OH its charge is -1 and to balance the charge you'd need +1 being the hydrogen Actually HOH is another common form of writing H2O (pure water). Since water has pH level of 7, it is neutral, neither a base, nor an acid.
HOH, which is water
The word neutralization means theproduct is neutral. Acid + base = Salt(neutral) + water HCl + NaOH = NaCl + HOH Hydrochloric acid + Sodium hydroxide = Salt + water
hoh
The ion of a Bronsted-Lowry acid refers to H+, as it is considered to be a "proton donor" by this system. The conjugate base is the anion of the initial acid; e.g., for HCl, Cl- is the conjugate base. To answer the question, a salt is produced when a cation that is not hydrogen joins this conjugate base. Typically speaking, the reaction of an acid and a base yields a salt and water. Let us consider the reaction of hydrobromic acid with potassium hydroxide. HBr + KOH --> HOH + KBr In this case, the salt, potassium bromide, is our expected product. This is all that's meant by the 'different positive atom'.
A base like sodium hydroxide (NaOH) combines with a acid (like HCl) to form a salt (like NaCl). Here is the equation NaOH + HCl = NaCl + HOH The Cation from the base (in this example Na which is the sodium ion) combines with the anion of the acid (in this case Cl which is the chloride ion) , leaving the hydrogen ion to combine with the hydroyl ion to produce HOH which is water.
Water has a neutral PH value of 7 and is neither acid or base (alkaline). Since water can be represented by HOH, if we try ro argue that water is ab acid because it releases hydrogen ions, we can also argue that water is a base because it releases OH ions.
Acid / Base reactions produce salts and water. For example - HCl (an acid) and NaOH (a base) produce NaCl (a salt) and HOH (H20 - water).
a base. for example, NaOH will because it is a base, but don't forget, bases are ionic compounds. so HOH wouldn't turn it pink. hope this helps!
Nf + nh4oh ------------> nh4f + hoh