Acid. It contains hyrdonium ions more than hydroxide ions.
HCl+NaOH, when mixed in equimolar amounts, produces a neutral solution of NaCl.
HCl is an acid.
HCL* and no, HCL (hydrochloric acid) is obviously an acid, and not a base. this is because on the pH scale HCL has a rating higher than 7pH, making it not a base nor neutral. ;)
To neutralize HCl acid, you can add a base such as sodium bicarbonate or sodium hydroxide to it. The base will react with the acid to form water and a salt, bringing the pH closer to neutral. Be sure to add the base slowly and carefully to avoid potential splattering.
HCl is an example of acid. It is not a base.
Hydrochloric acid is an acid.
HCl+NaOH, when mixed in equimolar amounts, produces a neutral solution of NaCl.
HCl is an acid.
HCL* and no, HCL (hydrochloric acid) is obviously an acid, and not a base. this is because on the pH scale HCL has a rating higher than 7pH, making it not a base nor neutral. ;)
To neutralize HCl acid, you can add a base such as sodium bicarbonate or sodium hydroxide to it. The base will react with the acid to form water and a salt, bringing the pH closer to neutral. Be sure to add the base slowly and carefully to avoid potential splattering.
HCl is an example of acid. It is not a base.
HCl is a strong acid, not a base.
It is an acid.
Neither, it is a neutral salt (conjugated with the strong acid HCl)
Common salt, or sodium chloride, is a neutral compound. It is formed from the reaction of a strong acid (hydrochloric acid - HCl) and a strong base (sodium hydroxide - NaOH), resulting in a neutral substance.
An acid-base reaction
Our stomachs are stronger acidic (pH 2!) from hydrochloric acid.