Potassium hydroxide is the most common. J Ayres
When KOH reacts with HCl, these products are formed. This is a neutralization reaction. KOH is a base while HCl is an acid.
KSCN is actually Neutral, and is not acidic nor basic.
Calcium chloride solution is neutral.
It is not a acid or base. It is a neutral compound.
Strongly acidic
It is not a base or acid as it is neutral and has a PH value of 7
Acid = Hydroiodic acid Base = Potassium hydroxide (or any Potassium salt of weak acid)
strong acid Hydrogen Chloride HCl strong base Potassium Hydroxide KOH HCl + KOH -> KCl + H2O
It depends on which chloride is being talked about. For example - hydrogen chloride(HCl) is an acid! However, potassium chloride(KCl) is a salt.
Potassium chloride is a salt, but it is not common table salt.Common table salt is sodium chloride.
Yes - you have an acid and base and the resultant products are a salt (Potassium Chloride) and water
You probably mean KCl, potassium chloride, which is a salt and therefore neither a base nor an acid, but as typed, you are enquiring about potassium carbon iodide, which is a non-existent compound.
Potassium sulfate is neither base nor acid - it is a salt. You could get it by mixing something like potassium hydroxide (a base) with sulfuric acid and allowing the neutralization reaction to occur. Since it is actually often produce by reacting potassium chloride with sulfuric acid to get potassium sulfate and HCl (aka hydrogen chloride, aka hydrochloric acid when dissolved in water) you might expect it to be contaminated with some residual acid.
HCL (hydrochloric acid) and KOH (Potassium hydroxide)HCL + KOH = KCL + H2Oso you need hydrochloric acid and potassium hydroxide.
Potassium Chloride (KCl) is an ionic salt of a weak acid and a weak base.
KCl is neither an acid or base but a neutral salt.
Solid potassium chloride is a salt. Dissolved in water, it forms a neither basic nor acidic solution, as both potassium and chloride ions are spectators.