A solution contain a solute dissolved in a solvent.
No. The mole of solution is equal to mole of solute plus mole of solvent (solVENT !, not solution)
You could titrate equal volumes of 1M solution of NaOH and 1M solution of HCl to obtain 1M solution of NaCl.
yes. because the ph of a neutrasl solution is 7. Meaning, the pOH of the solution is 7 7=7
solution is in equilibrium and the solvent and solute continue diffusion or osmosis at an equal rate.
In a neutral solution, the H plus is equal to OH-. The pH level in such a solution is usually at 7.
No. The mole of solution is equal to mole of solute plus mole of solvent (solVENT !, not solution)
no solution
No, only exces of OH- gives you an alkaline solution and exces of H+ gives you an acidic solution. When they are EQUAL then the solution (water) is NEUTRAL, pH= 7.0
A solution that contains equal concentrations of hydrogen and hydroxide ions is neutral. Water is the prime example.
No - 1% solution is 1/100th the strength of the original.
isotonic
a1/a2 is not equal to b1/b2
An equation has an equal sign, which means that we know what the variable is equal to :)
You could titrate equal volumes of 1M solution of NaOH and 1M solution of HCl to obtain 1M solution of NaCl.
Then it has (not have!) a unique solution.
No solution...
591 !