The heats of reaction for neutralization of NaOH and an acid will be largest if the acid is a mineral acid. (HCl, HF, HNO3, etc...) If NaOH neutralizes with an organic acid, the heat will be somewhat less because of the partially ionizing property of weak organic acids. (phenol, enol, alcohol, etc...)
It would depend a little on the concentrations and how fast you add the sodium hydroxide. If they had the same concentration the strong acid would react more and thus produce heat quicker.
Nothing will happen because Sodium Hydroxide is a strong alkali. Lead is not as strong as Sodium Hydroxide, so it will not react.
There is not a term used to described sodium hydroxide. If it is mixed with another element it would be referred to as hydrolysis.
No, solid sodium hydroxide absorbes moisture from air and becomes hydrated , if it is allow to decompose by strong heating it again converted into sodium hydroxide on cooling.
because it completely dissociates in water
Sodium Hydroxide is commonly used in cleaning agents in dish liquid soap, and as a drain un-clogger, as it is strong with dissolving things.
A neutralization reaction. Products are a salt and water. Between strong acids and bases.
A strong acid plus a strong base is an neutralization reaction as this is. NaOH + HCl --> NaCl + H2O sodium hydroxide plus hydrochloric acid produces a salt and water.
Yes, it dissociates completely into lithium and hydroxide ions.
NaOH + HCl -> NaCl + H2O A neutralization reaction resulting in the products of a salt and water.
No.
NaOH + HCl -> NaCl + H2O Many do. This is the reaction between the strong base, sodium hydroxide (NaOH), and the strong acid hydrochloric acid (HCl). And as usual in these neutralization reactions the products are a salt, sodium chloride, and water.
yes, most substances ending in hydroxide are strong bases
It is a strong base
2KOH + H2SO4 -> K2SO4 + 2H2O This is called a neutralization reaction. Both the acid and base are neutralized and a salt and water is produced.
No Gold is very nonreactive even towards strong alkalis such as sodium hydroxide.
Apex: Sodium HydroxideConfirmed it thanks to the other guy.
Sodium hydroxide (strong base) and Sulphuric acid (strong acid)