Sodium chloride solution is neutral; NaCl is a salt.
No, NaCl is neither an acid, weak acid, or a (weak) base. It is considered a salt.
NaCl is a salt formed by combination of a strong acid and a strong base, so it can't be put in simple acid or base category.
NaCl is a salt.
7. It is neutral
NaCl, which is sodium chloride, is neither an acid nor a base. It is a salt that is formed by the reaction of a base (sodium hydroxide) with an acid (hydrochloric acid). When dissolved in water, NaCl dissociates into Na+ and Cl- ions, neither of which contribute to the acidity or basicity of the solution.
when an acid mixes with a base. ex: NaOH (base) + HCl (acid) = NaCl (+ H2O) this is table salt.
It is neither a base nor an acid but a salt.It is the common salt we take with our meal.
NaCL and Water, this is a simple acid and base mixture which results in the production of NaCl and H20
NaC1 is noothing. NaCl (with a lowercase L) is a salt. In fact it is table salt.
No, NaOH and NaCl do not form a buffer system. A buffer system consists of a weak acid and its conjugate base, or a weak base and its conjugate acid, to help maintain a stable pH. NaOH is a strong base and NaCl is a salt, so they do not act as a buffer system together.
Sodium chloride is a salt; the water solution is neutral.
product of acid and base neutralization would be water and salt(doesnt have to be NaCl) example HCl + NaOH -> NaCl + H2O