Yes. Sulfuric acid is a strong electrolyte.
To prepare 0.25N sulphuric acid from 2N sulphuric acid, you can dilute the 2N solution by adding 7 parts of water to 1 part of the 2N solution. This will result in a final 0.25N sulphuric acid solution.
No. It is a mixture of sulphuric acid and water.
the h2 ions and the so4 ions in the sulphuric acid help electricity pass through it. this makes it a strong electrolyte.(electrolyte- a liquid which conducts electricity)
write chemical equation for the reaction between viscose solution and sulphuric acid
The red petal indicator would likely turn blue in a solution of sulphuric acid because sulphuric acid is a strong acid that would cause the indicator to change color.
train contain to much static electricity due to its metallic body but trucks a truck discharges the static electricity to the earth, so if sulphuric acid is transported by train that would cause an explosion due the reaction of sulphuric acid and static electricity
The solution is colorless.
Yes, it is dilute sulphuric acid.
To prepare a 50 mM Sulphuric acid solution, you would need to calculate the required volume of concentrated Sulphuric acid (typically 96-98%) needed to dilute in water to achieve the desired concentration. You can use the formula: C1V1 = C2V2, where C1 is the concentration of the concentrated acid, V1 is the volume of concentrated acid needed, C2 is the desired concentration (50 mM), and V2 is the final volume of the solution you want to prepare.
One way to convert dilute sulphuric acid to concentrated sulphuric acid is through a process called evaporation. In this method, the dilute acid is heated to evaporate the water content, leaving behind the concentrated acid. Another method involves adding concentrated sulphuric acid to the dilute solution until the desired concentration is achieved.
To act as a catalyst
Sulfuric Acid (or sulphuric if you're in the UK!)