Bromothymol Blue is a liquid indicator that can detect presence CO2 in water. It changes color from blue to green, as it detects the presence of the CO2 . In very acidic conditions it will turn yellow. It has also been used as an indicator in the NCO (isocyanate) test (where di-n-butylamine is the base and 1N HCl solution is the acid. Green is the endpoint in this titration and yellow is "over-shot". The amine value test in resin chemistry/synthesis also may use this indicator. HCl directly titrates an amine containing resin.
The water solution of bromothymol blue is a little acidic.
Bromothymol blue has no household uses.
Bromothymol is yellow under a pH=5.
Bromothymol blue is green at a pH of 5.
Bromothymol is a pH indicator that can appear yellow in acidic conditions and blue in alkaline conditions.
Bromothymol blue is blue in neutral or basic solutions, and yellow in acidic solutions.
yes. bromothymol blue can act as a acid base indicator. becoz in acidic condition(pH:below 7) bromothymol blue is in green colour whereas in alkaline condition(pH: above 7) its colour changes into blue..
Sodium chloride will not have any significant impact on bromothymol blue since it is a neutral compound that does not affect the pH indicator properties of bromothymol blue.
Bases change the color of bromothymol blue indicator from yellow to blue. This color change occurs because in acidic conditions, bromothymol blue appears yellow, while in basic conditions, it shifts to blue.
Bromothymol blue turns yellow when the solution is acidic.
Hydrochloric acid turns bromothymol blue yellow because the acid changes the pH of the solution, causing the bromothymol blue indicator to shift its color toward the yellow end of the spectrum.
Nitric acid will oxidize bromothymol blue, causing a color change from blue to yellow. This reaction is a result of the nitric acid oxidizing the alcohol groups in bromothymol to form new compounds with yellow coloration.