A salt ans usually water.
When an acid and a base react, they form water and a salt through a neutralization reaction. The acid donates a proton (H+) to the base, which accepts the proton, forming water. The remaining ions from the acid and base combine to create the salt.
Base, because when we react ferric oxide with sulphuric acid , it forms ferrous sulphate and water as in a neutralisation reaction
An Alkali is also a base. So, when reacted with an acid forms a salt and water as products
Salt is formed when an acid and a base react chemically through a neutralization reaction. The hydrogen ions from the acid combine with the hydroxide ions from the base to form water, while the remaining ions from the acid and base combine to form the salt.
The positive ions in salt come from the base, not the acid. When an acid and a base react to form salt, the acid donates a proton to the base, forming the salt and water.
Salt
They react and cancel each other out. The process is called neutralization and it causes them to cancel out.
Buffers contain both one weak acid and its coupled weak base, that can not react with each other (they are a so-called conjugated system). When you add strong acid it will react with the base part of this buffer, when strong base (hydroxide) is added it will react with the acid.
When a base reacts with an acid, they form a salt and water. The salt is the result of the neutralization reaction between the acid and base, where the H+ ions from the acid combine with the OH- ions from the base to form water, leaving behind the salt compound.
Nothing, because they do not react with each other.
When equal amounts of an acid and a base react, they neutralize each other to form water and a salt.
A base chemical will react with and neutralize an acid. Common examples of bases that neutralize acids are sodium hydroxide (NaOH) and calcium hydroxide (Ca(OH)2). When a base reacts with an acid, they undergo a chemical reaction that forms water and a salt.