You can take sodium chloride to be pretty much neutral. In water, it dissociates into sodium and chlorine ions. The chlorine acts as a weak Bronsted base (It's the conjugate base of HCl), but the sodium acts a weak bronsted acid (It's the conjugate acid of NaOH).
NaCl is not a base at all; it's a salt.
It is readily formed by the combination of a strong acid (HCl) and a strong base (NaOH).
No it is not. It is a salt made form a mixture of acid and a base.
The water solution of sodium chloride is neutral.
NaCl, sodium chloride, is a salt and an ionic compound. It does not donate protons to solution or accept protons in solution, so not an acid or base.
No. Sodium bicarbonate is a weak base.
Sodium chloride (NaCl) is a salt.
NaCl is a salt formed by combination of a strong acid and a strong base, so it can't be put in simple acid or base category.
Let's see. NaOH + HCl = NaCl + H2O The usual salt ( NaCl ) and water.
No, NaOH is a strong base and NaCl is the salt of a strong acid and a strong base and so has no acidic or basic properties. A buffer solution requires an acidic or basic salt and the corresponding weak acid or base.
HCl + NaOH--> NaCl + H2O
How about the ever faithful hydrochloric acid and sodium hydroxide: HCl + NaOH --> NaCl + H20. Strong Acid + Strong Base = Salt & Water
A salt of the acid and water. For example HCl + NaOH ---> NaCl + H2O
NaOH + HCl -> NaCl + H2O A neutralization reaction resulting in the products of a salt and water.
A strong acid and strong base (caustic soda ) reaction produces a salr and water. NaOH + HCl --> NaCl + H2O
This is a strong base/acid neutralization reaction with a product of salt and water. NaOH + HCl --> NaCl + H2O
Let's see. NaOH + HCl -> NaCl + H2O Looks like it. The product of this strong base and strong acid reaction is a salt ( table salt ) and water.
A strange question, as not /every/ strong acid and strong base will form an NaCl solution. Was the real question maybe: "Which strong acid with which strong base can form an NaCl solution?" (which sounds a lot like a chemistry quiz question...) to which the answer would be: Hydrochloric acid (HCl) with equimolar amounts of Sodium hydroxide (NaOH) (both naturally as aqueous solutions) will form an aqueous solution of NaCl: HCl + NaOH --> H+ + Cl- + Na+ + OH- --> H2O + Na+ + Cl-
Sodium Chloride (NaCl) solution is neutral because Sodium has a valency of +1 and Chlorine has a valency of -1 which means when they form a bond it is neutral. e.g. 1 - 1 = 0 Therefore, NaCl solution is neutral. If you are referring to it being neutral in terms of pH, it is because the Na+ and Cl- ions are pH neutral. In acid base terms NaCl is the salt of a strong acid (hydrochloric acid HCl) and a strong base (NaOH).