neutral.
Sea water is in fact basic. This results from the various salts dissolved in the water. Although one would expect sea water to be acidic (carbon dioxide from the air dissolves in water to form carbonic acid), limestone deposits help to keep the ocean basic.
Sea water is considered to be slightly basic, with a pH typically around 8.1. This means that it has a higher concentration of hydroxide ions compared to hydronium ions.
No
Neither. It's neutral. It's the product of a strong acid and a strong base.
yes
Sea water contains a large no. of salts dissolved in it making its pH 8.0 to 8.3 which means it is basic.
when CO2 dissolve in sea water it is actually present in several different forms. carbonic acid is only one of these. in ocean some carbonic acid rapidly brakes down to H+, CO32- so sea water is not acidic because of dissolve of large amount of CO2.
No, adding sea salt to water does not change its pH level to become more alkaline. Sea salt is a neutral substance and does not significantly affect the pH of water.
Yes, sea shells are made mostly of calcium carbonate, which will react with hydrochloride acid to produce water, carbon dioxide, and calcium chloride. CaCO3 + 2HCl --> H2O + CO2 + CaCl2
Sea water, Sulphuric Acid 95%onc., Phosgene, Phenol, & Milk.
The difference is: Rain is part of the water cycle - water from the sea evaporates and condenses in clouds, where it falls as rain, however, acid rain is when poisonous gasses dissolve the rain in the clouds, and then falls as acidic rain.
Hydrochloric acid (HCl) will produce an acidic solution when dissolved in water.