when an acid and a base combine, salt and water are formed. This process of reaction of an acid and base is called neutralisation.
Acid + Base → Water + Salt So it's salt.
It is a salt formed from strong acid and strong base and hence it is neither acidic nor basic.
acid + base → salt + water a salt and water are formed from the reaction between an acid and a base
A salt is the product of an acid/base reaction.
Yes it is! Yes it is! Yes it is! Yes it is!
Barium fluoride can be considered to be the salt of barium hydroxide (a weak base) and HF (a strong acid). And a solution of BaF2 will be weakly acidic.
No, very strong acid that can etch and dissolve glass and porcelain
Since F- is the conjugate base to the weak acid HF, it is a weak base.
No
The conjugate base of HF is the fluoride ion F-
when an acid and a base combine, salt and water are formed. This process of reaction of an acid and base is called neutralisation.
Yes. An acid-base reaction forms a salt and water. acid+ + base− = salt + water
I'm assuming you mean a salt neutralising an acid or base- This can not actually happen, because a salt is already 'Neutralised' An acid can neutralise a base, and a base neutralise an acid, but when Base+Acid reacts, a salt is formed. Adding a salt to a acid or base solution will only make it salty.
acid+ base= salt + water
Acid + base salt + water
No, it is not ionic. HF is covalent.