Yes, water can react as an acid or a base - amphoteric.
Because It Reacts With Both Acids And Bases
Water is an amphoteric substance.
amphoteric
In water solutions salts may be acidic, basic or amphoteric.
amphoteric
antimony is amphoteric, so in water it will behave as an acid and a base
Water is an amphoteric substance.
amphoteric
An example would be water which can gain a proton to form the hydroxonium ion (acting as a base) or donate a proton forming the hydroxide ion (acting as an acid). An acid is a proton donor; a base is a proton acceptor.
No, in order for a substance to be considered amphoteric it must be able to act as an acid and a base. Sodium sulfite will only act as a base, and thus it is not amphoteric.
Am amphoteric substance can react as a base but also as an acid.
Yes. A substance with both acidic and basic properties is called an amphoteric substance. Water, while generally regarded as neutral, is actually amphoteric. Sodium bicarbonate is also amphoteric. While it usually acts as a base, it can act as an acid under highly alkaline conditions.
No. It is only an acid.
Amphoteric Substance is one that can react as either an acid or base."Partly one and partly the other; neither acid nor alkaline; neutral" (I don't think this answer is correct)The word is derived from the Greek prefix ampho- meaning "both".Many metals (such as zinc, tin, lead, aluminium, and beryllium) and most metalloids have amphoteric oxides. Other examples include amino acids and proteins, which have amine and carboxylic acid groups, and self-ionizable compounds such as water and ammonia.
Substances that can act both as an acid and as a base are called
Usually water is considered neither acidic nor basic. It is neutral. But technically it is an amphoteric substance, meaning it has both acidic and basic properties.
A substance that has both acidic and basic properties is said to be an amphoteric substance.
Beryllium hydroxide - Be(OH)2 - is an amphoteric substance.