No. By definition a "solution" has a minimum of two components. An element is a single atomic entity. A solution cannot be an element.
Sodium hydroxide is not an unknown solution.
none, it is clear
No. A sodium hydroxide solution is very basic.
A 3 M sodium hydroxide solution means there are 3 moles of sodium hydroxide dissolved in 1 liter of solution.
To make 10 gallons of a 50% sodium hydroxide solution, you would need 10 pounds of sodium hydroxide. This is because the percentage indicates the weight of sodium hydroxide in the solution. Hence, in a 50% solution, half of the weight of the solution is sodium hydroxide.
Sodium hydroxide is prepared from sodium chloride by the electrolysis of the solution.
dilute sodium hydroxide solution
The chemical formula for the aqueous solution of sodium hydroxide is NaOH (sodium hydroxide) dissolved in water.
No Sodium hydroxide solution results -- not sodium chloride.
When hydrochloric acid solution neutralizes sodium hydroxide solution, water and sodium chloride are formed.
No. Water and sodium hydroxide will form a solution, but no reaction occurs.
When sodium hydroxide solution is added to ammonium hydroxide, a double displacement reaction occurs. Ammonium hydroxide is a weak base and sodium hydroxide is a strong base. The reaction produces water, sodium hydroxide, and ammonia gas.