its a salt
Sodium chloride is neutral.
The reaction between acetyl chloride (CH3COCl) and sodium hydroxide (NaOH) results in the formation of acetic acid (CH3COOH) and sodium chloride (NaCl). This is a classic acid-base reaction where the acetyl chloride acts as an acid, donating a proton to the sodium hydroxide base to form acetic acid and sodium chloride.
If you mean common table salt (sodium chloride), then neither. Sodium chloride is neutral.
Nope, sodium chloride is not an acid. It is more of a base due to its pH of 6.7 to 7.3 causing it to be a neutral/base. Also, it is ingested by humans, so lets hope its not a base!
The anion from an acid is Cl- and the cation from a base is Na+.
A base - sodium hydroxide.
Sodium chloride solution is neutral; NaCl is a salt.
Sodium chloride is formed when sodium hydroxide and hydrochloric acid react. This is a neutralization reaction where the sodium hydroxide (a base) and hydrochloric acid (an acid) combine to form a salt (sodium chloride) and water.
HCl (hydrochloric acid) and NaOH (sodium hydroxide) will react to NaCl (sodium chloride) and water.
Sodium (s) and chlorine (g)---> NaCl (s) I don't think either are strong acids or bases.
This is the hydrochloric acid and sodium hydroxide:NaOH + HCl = NaCl + H2O
Sodium chloride is the product of a reaction between an acid and a base: NaOH + HCl = NaCl + H2O