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.
Sodium chloride is a salt.
No, NaCl is neither an acid, weak acid, or a (weak) base. It is considered a salt.
It is called an acid-base reaction. The product is called a salt. For example: NaOH + HCl -> NaCl + H2O NaOH is the base. HCl is the acid. NaCl is the salt. H2O is water.
In acid base neutralisation, both the acid and the base react with each other to form salt and water. Ex: hcl+naoh --> nacl + hoh here, acid-hcl base-naoh salt-nacl water-hoh
NaCl is a salt.
7. It is neutral
when an acid mixes with a base. ex: NaOH (base) + HCl (acid) = NaCl (+ H2O) this is table salt.
product of acid and base neutralization would be water and salt(doesnt have to be NaCl) example HCl + NaOH -> NaCl + H2O
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
If acid & base are combined a neutal substance is produced.
When acid and base combine, they give a salt and water. NaOH + HCl -------> NaCl + H2O.
Sodium chloride is a salt; the water solution is neutral.