A strange question, as not /every/ strong acid and strong base will form an NaCl solution. Was the real question maybe: "Which strong acid with which strong base can form an NaCl solution?" (which sounds a lot like a chemistry quiz question...) to which the answer would be: Hydrochloric acid (HCl) with equimolar amounts of Sodium hydroxide (NaOH) (both naturally as aqueous solutions) will form an aqueous solution of NaCl: HCl + NaOH --> H+ + Cl- + Na+ + OH- --> H2O + Na+ + Cl-
If you mix them in equivalent amounts, you get a neutral salt NaCl and water H2O.
The sodium chloride solution is neutral.
A solution of a salt formed by the reaction of a weak acid and a strong base will be alkaline (pH>7)
neutral salt solution
basic salt will form
When each of the following is added to water, is the resulting solution acidic, basic, or neutral? a) HClO, b) NaCl, c) HCN, d) MgO, e) CH3OH
What determines if a solution is neutral is the ions present in solution. Something can be acidic, basic, or neutral. A typical acidic solution has H+ present in solution. An example of this is hydrochloric acid (HCl), which is a very strong acid. A typical basic solution has hydroxide ions (OH-) in solution. An example of this is NaOH. A neutral solution has ions that exhibit no acid/base properties. One of these is sodium chloride (NaCl). Group 1 ions do not exhibit any acid base properties, such as Na+. The conjugate bases of strong acids and the conjugate acids of strong bases also do not exhibit acid and base qualities. Cl- is the conjugate base of the strong acid HCl. There for a solution of NaCl is neutral or a pH of 7. So what determines if a solution is neutral are the ions present in solution. Group 1 ions are always neutral. Some other ions that are always neutral are Cl-, I-, Br-, and SO42- . These are all conjugate bases of strong acids.
None. Salt states for NaCl. When solid it has the structure of an ionic crystal. When put in water, the solution contains free ions of Na+ and Cl-. Both ions do not react with water as their alkaline and acid properties (perspectively) are very weak. As a result, the solution is neutral. It is a pH of 7 when in a temperature of 25oC.
It depends on the chemical composition of the salt. If it is acidic or basic it will change the pH. The common salt (NaCl) is neutral in nature so it doesn't change the pH.
It depend on the chemical composition of salt If it is acidic or basic it will change the pH. The common salt (NaCl) is neutral in nature so it doesn't change the pH
NaCl is neutral so it will produce a solution with a pH of 7 in any concentration.
When each of the following is added to water, is the resulting solution acidic, basic, or neutral? a) HClO, b) NaCl, c) HCN, d) MgO, e) CH3OH
Sodium chloride is a neutral salt.
Sodium chloride is a salt; the water solution is neutral.
Neither, NaCl is a simple ionic compound that dissolves completely in water yielding a neutral solution. Na+ is the cation and Cl- is the anion.
Salt is such as table salt NaCl is neutral. It is neither basic or acidic.
It is neutral. Molecules containing elements on opposite sides of the periodic table (basic elements and acidic elements) are neutral. Unless it's H because H is acidic by definition. So HCl would be a strong acid while NaCl or KCL would be neutral.
NaCl is nor basic neither acidic.It is neutral.
What determines if a solution is neutral is the ions present in solution. Something can be acidic, basic, or neutral. A typical acidic solution has H+ present in solution. An example of this is hydrochloric acid (HCl), which is a very strong acid. A typical basic solution has hydroxide ions (OH-) in solution. An example of this is NaOH. A neutral solution has ions that exhibit no acid/base properties. One of these is sodium chloride (NaCl). Group 1 ions do not exhibit any acid base properties, such as Na+. The conjugate bases of strong acids and the conjugate acids of strong bases also do not exhibit acid and base qualities. Cl- is the conjugate base of the strong acid HCl. There for a solution of NaCl is neutral or a pH of 7. So what determines if a solution is neutral are the ions present in solution. Group 1 ions are always neutral. Some other ions that are always neutral are Cl-, I-, Br-, and SO42- . These are all conjugate bases of strong acids.
None. Salt states for NaCl. When solid it has the structure of an ionic crystal. When put in water, the solution contains free ions of Na+ and Cl-. Both ions do not react with water as their alkaline and acid properties (perspectively) are very weak. As a result, the solution is neutral. It is a pH of 7 when in a temperature of 25oC.
In solution the number of chloride ions (negative) equals the number of positive ions (sodium). NaCl -> Na+ + Cl- which is neutral in totality (neither acid nor alkaline)
Sodium Chloride (NaCl) solution is neutral because Sodium has a valency of +1 and Chlorine has a valency of -1 which means when they form a bond it is neutral. e.g. 1 - 1 = 0 Therefore, NaCl solution is neutral. If you are referring to it being neutral in terms of pH, it is because the Na+ and Cl- ions are pH neutral. In acid base terms NaCl is the salt of a strong acid (hydrochloric acid HCl) and a strong base (NaOH).