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Acidic solutions contain very high concentrations of hydrogen ions. In an acidic solution, then, the concentration of hydrogen ions is greater than the concentration of hydroxide ions.
acidic
acidic
When a solution has more hydrogen ions it will be acidic.
acidic
Acidic solutions contain very high concentrations of hydrogen ions. In an acidic solution, then, the concentration of hydrogen ions is greater than the concentration of hydroxide ions.
acidic
If it is in water (supposedly meant by questioneer), the pH value is below 7.0, so it is an acid solution: more H+ than OH-
acidic
The concentration of hydrogen in a solution increases as the pH of the solution becomes more acidic.
When a solution has more hydrogen ions it will be acidic.
acidic
It can be either. A solution with excess hydronium ions is one that is acidic, regardless of how strong the acid is.
They are acidic due to hydrogen ions. The more hydrogen ions converted from the original solution there are the more acidic it will be. For example Hydrochloric Acid converts more hydrogen ions from (hydrogen + water + chloride) solution than citric acid does from its respective solution...
When excess of hydrogen or hydronium ions are present in the solution , the solution will have pH less than 0. Phenolphthalein possesses dark orange color to the solution having pH less than 0. Hence, phenolphthalein will possess dark orange color in the presence of excess of hydrogen or hydronium ions.
The more acidic a solution is, the more hydrogen ions it gives off.
Ammonium chloride dissociates 100% into ions in solution. The ammonium ions interact with the hydroxide ions from the water removing them from the solution. This increases the concentration of hydrogen ions, increasing the acidity of the solution. We say that a solution of ammonium chloride is acidic by hydrolysis.