0,1,2,3,4,5,6
It would be a substance with a pH number below 7.
A number less than a pH of 4 indicates a strong acid.
0 - 6.9 The lower the pH number the higher the concentration of hydronium ions and higher the strength of acid
i think a strong acid ionizes completely in water while a weak acid ionizes partiallly in water therefore the pH of a strong acid is greater than that of a weak acid The first part of your answer was correct, but the second was reversed. The pH of a strong acid is lower than the pH of a weak acid.
2 pH is the answer
An acid would be on the left side of a pH scale
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 number will be higher
No, an acid typically has a pH below 7. A pH of 6 is slightly acidic, but a stronger acid would have a pH closer to 1 or 2.
yes a strong acid would have a lower ph level
The pH of hydrochloric acid has a pH of 2.
pH is not a measure of how strong an acid is, it is a measure of how acidic or basic a solution is. This depends on both the strength of the acid/base and how much is dissolved in a given amount of water. Any acid will produce a pH below 7, and a strong acid will usually produce a very low pH, but again, that depends on the concentration. However, a pH of 0-3 would be considered a strong acid. Yet concentrated glacial acetic acid although very corrosive and strong would not have a pH this low.