It is a mixture of known concentrations of negatively charged ions. The standard solution is usually used to calibrate an instrument. The standard solution I use has 1000mg/L of 7 different anions; fluoride, chloride, nitrite as N, nitrate as N, phospate, sulfate, and bromide. I use this to calibrate an Ion Chromatograph that analyzes water for the presence of the anions.
Standard Solution is a solution that the concentration of which is accurately known
if a solution mixed any other soluion
Bisulfate is HSO4- anion, which is weakly acidic in nature (capable of protolysis, proton donation) while the acetate anion (CH3COO-) is basic only.
Yes, salt mixed in water is a solution. Specifically a homogeneous solution.
A solution that has been titrated against a primary standard solution.
Nitrate or NO3 is an inorganic anion. A 50 mg/l Nitrate solution (as NO3) is the equivalent to a 11.3 mg/l Nitrate solution (as N).
The chloride anion. Silver chloride is a solid that will precipitate out of solution.
no yes
The chloride anion is not observed in solution.
The anion chloride (Cl-) from salt is corrosive in solution.
Standard Solution is a solution that the concentration of which is accurately known
In a water solution sodium chloride is dissociated in Na+ (cation) and Cl- (anion).
is that solution that is just unlike standard solution .so if any solution dont have the standard property which is called the non standard solution the property of the standard solution is:-1.high purity 2.it is stable toward the air 3.available it means that in the lost cost.........
Standard solution
It depends what it is mixed with.
if a solution mixed any other soluion
It's a solution