Less than 7.
It can be. An acid's pH value is always less than 7.
Usually a strong acid will produce a lower pH, but not always. pH is not a measure of the strength of an acid (or base) but the acidity of a solution, which is dependent on both the strength of the acid or base and its concentration in the solution.
No, the pH is not always 7 at the equivalence point. The pH at the equivalence point depends on the nature of the acid and base being titrated.
The pH at the equivalence point is not always 7 because it depends on the nature of the acid and base being titrated. If a strong acid and strong base are used, the pH will be close to 7 at the equivalence point. However, if a weak acid or weak base is involved, the pH may be higher or lower than 7 due to the presence of excess ions from the weak acid or base.
Yes In theory, you could have a very weak solution of a strong acid and a stong solution of a weak acid and they would have the same pH.
A strong acid always has a pH much lower than 14.
The pH scale does not indicate the strength of the acid, so there is no number on the pH scale that indicates the strongest acid. A pH value of zero will be the most concentrated strong acid, but even that isn't exactly correct. Concentrations greater than 1 M have pH values <0, but are not useful values because of intermolecular interactions and activity values.
The pH level for acetic acid is 3... The pH level for acetic acid is 3...
pH below 7 always is acid, base has pH above 7.
The pH at the equivalence point may not always be 7 in a neutralization titration because the nature of the acid and base being titrated can affect the pH. For example, if a strong acid is titrated with a weak base, the equivalence point may be acidic (pH < 7) due to the excess of the strong acid present. Conversely, if a strong base is titrated with a weak acid, the equivalence point may be basic (pH > 7) due to the excess of the strong base.
The pH of an acid is higher than 7.
Not easy from scratch as it will depend on the acid - not least concentration and whether it is Strong or weak. Practically, you'd use a pH meter and SLOWLY add acid to some water being vigorously stirred.