The product is sodium chloride.The reaction is:NaOH + HCl - NaCl + H2O
Quantity matters. If there is a lot of buffer (in terms of moles) and relatively little NaOH then the buffer will prevent any change in pH. If there is relatively more NaOH than buffer, then of course the pH will rise.
The reactants are NaCl and H2O. A becks: HCl NaOH
That is correct: HCl(aq) + NaOH(aq) --> NaCl(aq) +H2O
yes
NO
No, NaOH is a strong base and NaCl is the salt of a strong acid and a strong base and so has no acidic or basic properties. A buffer solution requires an acidic or basic salt and the corresponding weak acid or base.
The product is sodium chloride.The reaction is:NaOH + HCl - NaCl + H2O
Quantity matters. If there is a lot of buffer (in terms of moles) and relatively little NaOH then the buffer will prevent any change in pH. If there is relatively more NaOH than buffer, then of course the pH will rise.
The reactants are NaCl and H2O. A becks: HCl NaOH
That is correct: HCl(aq) + NaOH(aq) --> NaCl(aq) +H2O
yes
HCl is an acid which reacts with NaOH a base to produce H2O water and a salt - in this case NaCl HCl + NaOH = NaCl + H2O
Hc2H3O2 and NaC2H2O2 or HCL and NaOH or HNO3and NaNO3 or KCL and NaOH?
Bonds to the phosphate
TiOCl2 + NaOH - TiO2 + NaCl + HCl
There is no NaCl2. It would simply be NaCl and the reactant would be HCl and NaOH. Thus,HCl + NaOH ==> NaCl + H2O