Strong acids have pH values below 3 , so it is a weak acid.
Strong because a substance with a pH of 7 is considered neutral, so the further away from 7 the pH gets, the more strong of an acid it becomes.
your but maybe
Strong acid = 1 pH ( or lower ) Strong base = 14 pH ( or higher ) Neutral solution = 7 pH
HCl is hydrochloric acid, which is a very strong acid, with a low pH.
The strong acids have pH=2 as HCl or H2SO4.
Anything below 7 (but not including 7) is an acid.
pH of a strong acid would be '1' or '2' pH of a weak acid would be '5' or '6' . NB 'pH' is a logarithmic scale of the hydrogen ion content of a substance. The small/bigger the number, the greater/lesser the hydrogen ion content.
The strong acids have pH=2 as HCl or H2SO4.
in contrast... Hcl is a strong acid... It takes pH to 1,... Note: its reactivity depends on its concentration.
A pH of 0 indicates an extremely acidic substance. Technically pH can be negative, but this is difficult to achieve.
when acid is added to a substance in the pH, the substance rises in a pressurized state
There is no definite pH of hydrochloric acid or any other substance. pH is a measure of the concentration of hydrogen ions in a solution which depends on both how strong an acid or base is and how concentrated it is (how much is dissolved in a given volume of water). Because hydrochloric acid is a strong acid the pH can be calculated as the negative logarithm (base 10) of its molar concentration up to a pH of 7.