neutralisation.... i..think.................
to show neutralisation we
Yes you can reverse it by pouring back the acid.
A neutralization reaction is when an acid and a base react to form water and salt and involves the combination of H+ ions and OH- ions to generate water. When a solution is neutralized, it means that salts are formed from equal weights of acid and base.
It is probably the neutralisation of the detergent, an alkali, and water, although the pH of water is 7. Neutralisation is an exothermic reaction, which means heat is produced, therefore detergent gets hot when wet.
Well one of the most common neutralisation examples in the home are indigestion tablets. They have alkali in them so they neutralise excess stomach acids and turn them into water.
When you remove limescale all i got soz.
some egsamples of neutralisation is........... =====...... hey im jade
neutralisation reaction: n=vm2 + charlotte
neutralisation.... i..think.................
Because it doesnt have water
1. When you wash your hair. Shampoo is acidic and conditioner is alkaline (or vice versa?) and so they both neutralise each other.
Basically neutralisation meansi t is a reaction between an acid and a baseto give neutral product i.e. neither acidic or basic is called neutralisation reaction. There are manny applications of neutralisation reactions. they are: In human beings agriculture soap industry textile industry food industry
water and salt
Yes it can
Sherbert is made using neutralisation reaction because it makes the sherbet soft and mushy.
acid + base --> water + salt