A chemical reaction in which an acid and a base interact with the formation of a salt; with strong acids and bases the essential reaction is the combination of hydrogen ions with hydroxyl ions to form water
When an acid reacts with an alkali (or vice versa) it is called neutralisation.
During a neutralisation reaction, the indicator changes color to indicate the pH change. For example, litmus paper turns red in an acidic solution, blue in a basic solution, and purple in a neutral solution. This color change helps to visually confirm when the reaction has reached equilibrium.
Neutralisation is a chemical reaction between an acid and a base that results in the formation of water and a salt. It is a common way to balance the pH levels of a solution. In the process, the acidic and basic properties of the initial substances are canceled out, leading to a neutral outcome.
When an alkali cancels out an acid, it forms a neutral solution known as a salt. This reaction is called neutralization.
Salts from neutralization reactions are typically named by combining the name of the cation from the base with the name of the anion from the acid. For example, sodium chloride is formed from the reaction of hydrochloric acid and sodium hydroxide.
neutralisation reaction: n=vm2 + charlotte
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.
it is important because it is important
acid + base --> water + salt
neutralisation
it sum sort of poo
Salt and water
some egsamples of neutralisation is........... =====...... hey im jade
when the pH is betwem 4.5 & 5.7