dilute sodium hydroxide solution
Ammonium Hydroxide is available as a dilute solution - yes.
In a dilute solution of either hydrocholic acid of sodium hydroxide.
Yes. Adding water to a solution of sodium hydroxide will dilute the NaOH and lower the pH.
You are probably looking for "dilute" but that is wrong, dilute is relative. A dilute solution of table salt (sodium chloride) can be a very different concentration to a dilute solution of slaked lime (calcium hydroxide).
You will get a solution of potassium chloride and potassium hypochlorite.
impossible....u want to use a low contrated solution to dilute into a higher contration solution? No way man,...
Sodium Hydroxide is a very strong base and a 50% solution has a PH over 14. If you dilute it down to only 3.88% you will begin to see PH results under 14. If You dilute it all the way down to 0.005% The PH will still be over 11.
The pH remain constant.
Copper(II) hydroxide can be produced by adding a small amount of sodium hydroxide to a dilute solution of copper(II) sulfate (CuSO4 · 5H2O). The precipitate produced in this manner, however, often contains water molecules and an appreciable amount of sodium hydroxide impurity. A purer product can be attained if ammonium chloride is added to the solution beforehand. Alternatively, copper hydroxide is readily made by electrolysis of water (containing a little electrolyte such as sodium bicarbonate). A copper anode is used, often made from scrap copper.
Neutralization reaction occurs.
Dilute 400ml of concentrated solution (14.8 M, 28% NH3) to 1 litre.
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