Adding a base
A dilute acid would be represented by the chemical symbol for the specific acid, followed by "(aq)" to indicate that it is in aqueous solution. For example, a dilute solution of hydrochloric acid would be represented as HCl(aq).
One way to convert dilute sulphuric acid to concentrated sulphuric acid is through a process called evaporation. In this method, the dilute acid is heated to evaporate the water content, leaving behind the concentrated acid. Another method involves adding concentrated sulphuric acid to the dilute solution until the desired concentration is achieved.
Concentrated sulfuric acid can be made from dilute sulfuric acid by removing the water through a process such as distillation or evaporation. This can be achieved by heating the dilute sulfuric acid to bring it to its boiling point and capturing the vapors that are released, leaving behind the more concentrated sulfuric acid.
Dilute acid is already a solution.
Dilute sulfuric acid is still acid. It is NOT basic at all.
A concentrated acid is more dangerous than a dilute acid.
That depends on how dilute the hydrochloric acid is. Your stomach naturally produces hydrochloric acid as part of the natural human digestive process. If you just drank a liter of water and had little in your stomach to begin with, your stomach would then contain a dilute solution of hydrochloric acid.
Yes, stomach acid is dilute ,0.01M to 0.1 molar.
veniger is the example of dilute acid .
dilute
H2SO4(dilute)
the answer is dilute sulphuric acid... thats what everyone says