pH of 7 to 14 is basic. seawater has a pH of 7.8 to 8.2. So that makes it basic
Acid + Basic ----> Salt + Water + Heat
In a neutralisation reaction, an acid and a base will react to form a salt and water. This salt will be either acidic, basic or neutral depending upon the pH of the reactions. General rules:weak acid + strong base → basic salt + waterstrong acid + weak base → acidic salt + waterstrong acid + strong base → neutral salt + waterweak acid + weak base → neutral salt + water
NaH2PO4 is an acid salt because it is derived from a weak acid (H3PO4) and a strong base (NaOH). This salt will have acidic properties when dissolved in water.
Salt water is considered neutral, with a pH of around 7. The presence of salt in water does not make it inherently acidic or basic.
A salt and water compound. A basic solution (ammonia) neutralises an acid.
The products of this reaction are a salt and water.
Barium chloide is a salt; the water solution is neutral.
Na+Cl->NaCl or "salt." I pray you don't have much raw sodium or chloride laying around though as both are terribly poisonous.
Sodium benzoate (NaC6H5CO2) is the salt of benzoic acid, which is a weak acid. Therefore, when dissolved in water, it will be slightly basic due to the formation of hydroxide ions from the reaction between the sodium ions and water.
Sodium hypophosphite (Na2HPO3) is a basic salt because it is the product of a strong base (sodium hydroxide, NaOH) reacting with a weak acid (hypophosphorous acid, H3PO2). This means the salt will hydrolyze in water to form a basic solution.
Acetic acid is a weak acid that does not completely dissociate in water to form a salt with a metal cation. Instead, it forms a normal salt through a reaction with a base, where the acidic hydrogen is replaced by a metal cation to form a salt like sodium acetate.
Salt water is neutral.