Alkali.
IF something contains hydroxide ions it is an alkali.
It is an ALKALI
To neutralise a strong acid, you would need a strong alkali (or lots of a weak alkali, but that would be impractical). Potassium hydroxide, sodium hydroxide, lithium hydroxide, calcium hydroxide, calcium hydroxide and magnesium hydroxide would all work.
sulphuric acid+lithium hydroxide=lithium sulphate+water
Yes. It forms Lithium hydroxide.
Alkali
Yes. Lithium hydroxide is a strong electrolyte, which means that in aqueous solution it separates into its individual cations and anions, which allows the solution to conduct electricity.LiOH --> Li+ + OH-
To neutralise a strong acid, you would need a strong alkali (or lots of a weak alkali, but that would be impractical). Potassium hydroxide, sodium hydroxide, lithium hydroxide, calcium hydroxide, calcium hydroxide and magnesium hydroxide would all work.
sulphuric acid+lithium hydroxide=lithium sulphate+water
Yes. It forms Lithium hydroxide.
Alkali
Yes. Lithium hydroxide is a strong electrolyte, which means that in aqueous solution it separates into its individual cations and anions, which allows the solution to conduct electricity.LiOH --> Li+ + OH-
sulphuric acid + lithium hydroxide ---> lithium sulphate + water
it depends on what is in the alkali, sodium, calcium, lithium all turn different colours, I believe lithium turns purple, an alkali is a compound with hydroxide ie sodium hydroxide is NaOH
The acid that reacts with lithium hydroxide in a neutralization reaction to form lithium sulfate and water is sulfuric acid (H2SO4).
Lithium sulphate. Here is the reaction equation 2LiOH + H2SO4 = Li2SO4 + 2H2O NB Remember the general reaction equation Acid + Alkali = Salt + Water.
Sodium hydroxide is an alkali, not an acid.
As with all hydroxides it is an alkali.
Sodium hydroxide ia an alkali