Neither - there is no such substance.
Common salt, or sodium chloride, is neutral in nature. It does not exhibit acidic or basic properties.
Lithium chloride aqueous solution is neutral. It will not significantly alter the pH of the solution.
The chloride ion is neither acidic nor basic. Elemental chlorine itself is not acidic, but it will react with water to form hydrochloric acid and hypochlorous acid.
The solution of Copper II chloride is acidic. When dissolved in water, copper II chloride forms copper II ions and chloride ions, which can react with water to produce hydrogen ions, resulting in an acidic solution.
TAble salt is neutral, not basic or acidic.
Sodium chloride solution is neutral.
Salts can be acidic or basic depending on the cation and anion they are composed of. If the cation comes from a weak base or the anion comes from a weak acid, the salt can be acidic or basic. For example, ammonium chloride is acidic because the ammonium ion comes from a weak base (ammonia) while the chloride ion comes from a strong acid (hydrochloric acid).
Strontium chloride, SrCl2, is an ionic compound, and is neutral.
neither, a common salt solution is neutral
A salt solution can be acidic, basic, or neutral depending on the cation and anion present in the salt. For example, a solution of sodium chloride (NaCl) is neutral, while a solution of ammonium chloride (NH4Cl) is acidic and a solution of sodium hydroxide (NaOH) is basic.
It is neither acidic, nor basic. It even isn't an anion: element Chlorine is Cl2.
Chloride itself is not acidic. It is the negative ion of chlorine, which is a non-metal. Chloride ions do not donate hydrogen ions in water, so they are not considered acidic.