you call it erosion
The process where an acid and a base neutralize each other are called neutralization reaction. The products of this process are a salt and water. For example:- NaOH + HCl -------> NaCl + H2O
A salt is the product of the reaction between an acid and a base.
Strong or mineral or inorganic acids. Strong base
The acid base volume ratio is call the titration. The formula is Macid + Vbase = Vacid + Mbase. Macid is concentration of the acid. Vbase is volume of the base. Vacid is the volume of the acid. Mbase is the concentration of the base.
Because it does. This is what we call science. The in-despicable earth.
nucleotides, which consist of a 5carbon sugar, a phosphate group and a nitrogenous base
To answer in the simplest terms it refers to bringing the pH ( represented by the H+ ions floating in the liquid we call acid ) of acid to the pH of Water ( approximately pH 7 ) by adding alkali ( liquid with lots of OH- ions in it ) to it.
Yes - it is a "Lewis salt" formed from a Lewis acid and a Lewis base. Most chemists would not call it a salt which is a term they would reserve for the product of the neutralisation of an H+ acid. They would call this an adduct or a complex.
The process of lightening a color by adding white is called "tinting." This results in a lighter shade or tint of the original color.
Common salt, table salt, sodium chloride, NaCl, whatever you call it is pretty much neutral in solution. This is because the double-replacement acid-base reaction that produces it has HCl and NaOH as reactants, and these are a strong acid and a strong base. Therefore, their "strength," which is a measure of their degree of ionization in solution, is about the same, and will cancel out.
Well, in this case a Base, opposing solution to the acid is mixed with lemonade an acid will create the process of neutralization. This is because the atoms and ions (call it anything) will neutralize because the extra ion will move to the other.
Common salt, or sodium chloride, is a neutral compound. It is formed from the reaction of a strong acid (hydrochloric acid - HCl) and a strong base (sodium hydroxide - NaOH), resulting in a neutral substance.