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No, only exces of OH- gives you an alkaline solution and exces of H+ gives you an acidic solution. When they are EQUAL then the solution (water) is NEUTRAL, pH= 7.0
No. If the number of H+ and OH- ions are equal then the solution is neutral. A solution is considered alkaline if it has more OH- ions than H+ ions.
It is a neutral solution, pH = 7.0 at room temp.
neutrial
No. pH is the negative logarithm of the concentration of the hydronium ion. Equal numbers of hydronium ions and hydroxyl ions occurrs only when a solution is neutral.
No, only exces of OH- gives you an alkaline solution and exces of H+ gives you an acidic solution. When they are EQUAL then the solution (water) is NEUTRAL, pH= 7.0
No. If the number of H+ and OH- ions are equal then the solution is neutral. A solution is considered alkaline if it has more OH- ions than H+ ions.
Equilibrium
It is a neutral solution, pH = 7.0 at room temp.
There is no real-number solution to this problem.There is a complex solution. The numbers are:4.5 + i sqrt(15.75)and4.5 - i sqrt(15.75)
neutral
The answer depends on what the numbers measure. If they are the masses of equal volumes of substances, then the substance with mass 0.8 is denser. On the other hand, if the numbers refer to the volumes of equal masses of two substances, then the substance with volume 0.7 is denser.
neutrial
No two consecutive whole numbers equal 0.5625 using the basic operations of arithmetic.
There aren't any such numbers. 9 and 20 are 11 apart but cannot be manipulated to give the required solution.
"Slightly basic" refers to the pH of the substance being described. A neutral substance has an equal number of H+ and OH- ions, whereas acids have most H+ and bases have more OH-. A slightly basic substance probably has a pH between 8 and 9, since neutral is 7. The lower the pH (1-6) indicates the substance is acidic. A pH of 8 through 14 indicates basic substance.
how about i dont know