0-6 is considered an Acid.
7 is considered a neutral.
8-14 are considered Bases.
Anything with a pH less than 7 is an acid. Anything with a pH greater than 7 is a base. pH = 7 is neutral
If it is an acid then add a base until the pH level becomes 7, which is neutral. If it is a base, add acid until the pH is seven.
it is acid because a chemical is acid if pH is <7 ,base if pH>7 and neutral if pH=7
All acids(pH -7) can be neutralized by a base(pH 7+) to form hydrogen molecules or become neutral (pH:7) Acid does not have a specific base.
The neutral point is 7. Anything below that is an acid, and anything above the pH of 7 is a base.
pH<7 acid pH=7 neutral pH>7 base
pH<7 acid pH=7 neutral pH>7 base
Anything with a pH of 7 is neutral
An example of something with the pH of 7 is simply water. A pH of 7 is neutral, so it is neither an acid or a base. It's just neutral.
Anything with a pH less than 7 is an acid. Anything with a pH greater than 7 is a base. pH = 7 is neutral
Acid solution is not neutral, neutral is PH=7, so you need to add base until PH=7
If it is an acid then add a base until the pH level becomes 7, which is neutral. If it is a base, add acid until the pH is seven.
it is acid because a chemical is acid if pH is <7 ,base if pH>7 and neutral if pH=7
All acids(pH -7) can be neutralized by a base(pH 7+) to form hydrogen molecules or become neutral (pH:7) Acid does not have a specific base.
The neutral point is 7. Anything below that is an acid, and anything above the pH of 7 is a base.
There's no such thing as a base of an acid! A base is a substance with a pH of 8-14, and an acid is a base with a pH of 0-6. A neutral substance has a pH of 7.
To determine whether a substance is an acid or a base, you look at it's pH. If it is over 7, it is a base. If it is below 7, it is an acid. If the pH is 7, the substance is neutral.