2koh+h2so4 --> 2h2o + K2SO4
or
1koh+h2so4 --> h2o + KHSO4
potassium sulphate-plus hydrogen
A sort of salt
sulphuric acid
Potassium hydroxide is a strong alkali. Therefore it can be neutralized by using a strong acid such as nitric acid or sulfuric acid.
H2so4 +2koh>k2so4+2h2o
ddrdg
2 KOH + H2SO4 --> 2 H2O + K2SO4 Potassium Hydroxide + Sulfuric Acid --> Water + Potassium Sulfate.
Potassium sulfate = K2SO4
sulphuric acid
Potassium hydroxide is a strong alkali. Therefore it can be neutralized by using a strong acid such as nitric acid or sulfuric acid.
Potassium Sulfate and water
H2so4 +2koh>k2so4+2h2o
ddrdg
Hydrochloric acid Sulfuric acid Phosphoric acid Sodium hydroxide Calcium hydroxide Potassium hydroxide
2 KOH + H2SO4 --> 2 H2O + K2SO4 Potassium Hydroxide + Sulfuric Acid --> Water + Potassium Sulfate.
KOH for potassium hydroxide, and H3PO4 for phosphoric acid.
Actually there are two possibillities:K2SO4, potassium sulfate, when 1 mole sulfuric acid is added to 2 moles potassium hydroxide 2 KOH + H2SO4 ------> K2SO4 + 2 H2OorKHSO4, potassium hydrogen sulfate (-bisulfate), when 1 mole sulfuric acid is added to 1 mole potassium hydroxide 1 KOH + H2SO4 ------> KHSO4 + H2O
when sulphuric acid is reacted with potassium hydroxide, neutrallisation reaction occurs to form water and potassium sulphate.
Na2SO4 and H2O