An acid when mixed with a neutral liquid (most often distilled water is used) is called its dilute form. Conversely if an acid is in its natural form, it's called its concentrated form.
A concentrated acid is more dangerous.
diluted acid is less concentrated i.e. it is mixed with water and a less harmful(like sulphuric acid.) whereas concentrated acid is in its original form...
Dilute hydrochloric acid has a lower concentration of HCl compared to concentrated hydrochloric acid. This means that there is less HCl in a given volume of dilute acid compared to concentrated acid. Dilute hydrochloric acid is typically less corrosive and has milder effects compared to concentrated hydrochloric acid.
The reaction between concentrated nitric acid (HNO3) and galactose (C6H12O6) would result in the oxidation of galactose to formic acid and other products. The specific chemical equation would be complex and involve multiple steps and intermediate compounds.
The reaction between concentrated sulfuric acid and germanium would produce germanium sulfate and sulfur dioxide gas.
There are many different concentrations of "concentrated sulphuric acid". It is possible to deduce the concentration of the sulphuric acid by titration.
Concentrated acid means there's a lot of it; that is, a high concentration. By convention, "concentrated" means "straight out of the stock bottle," for some acids this is nearly pure and for others it's not (phosphoric acid is typically supplied as a solution that's about 70% w/w phosphoric acid, for example). Lab bottles labeled "dilute" usually contain a 6M solution unless otherwise specified. Strong acid means that it fully dissociates in water (at least the first proton, for multiprotic acids). Strong/weak and concentrated/dilute are completely different scales that have nothing to do with each other. * 18.3M sulfuric acid is strong and concentrated * 6M sulfuric acid is strong and dilute * Glacial acetic acid is weak and concentrated * 6M acetic acid is weak and dilute
A concentrated acid has more acid than water and a dilute acid has more water than acid. True facts, otherwise known as its molarity. The greater the molarity the more concentrated it is (moles of acid/ liter of solution)
Examples: - concentrated solution of sulfuric acid - concentrated solution of nitric acid - concentrated solution of ethanol - concentrated solution of sugar (syrup) - concentrated solution of table salt
concentrated nitric acid concentrated sulphuric acid
A concentrated acid is typically represented by the symbol "H+".
Yes, concentrated sulfuric acid is a liquid.