I do believe acetaminophen is alkaline due to its potential toxicity to the liver in higher dosages . This is common with alkaline substances that are orally ingested . Acidic substances are typically harmful to the gastrointestinal system in high concentrations, and warning labels for acetaminophen do not stipulate potential damage to the gastrointestinal system . The labels do however specific potential liver failure. I am not am expert.
No an alkali is the opposite of an acid. Alkali = basic; acid = acidic.
it is complete alkali
it is complete alkali
acid
Both acid and alkali can be corrosive
alkali is used to reduce acid and acid is used to reduce alkali
a nettle sting is acid but a doc leaf is alkali which is why it neutralises it
No gas is produced in the reaction of an acid and an alkali. In a neutralisation reaction, acid + alkali -> salt + water
alkali
Alkali.
alkali
Alkali