The combination of an acid and a base will result in the production of a salt and sometimes, water (requires a hydroxide (OH-) base and an acid that will make hydrogen (H+) ions). This is called a neutralization reaction.
A Salt and Water.
a base is represented by OH- and an acid is H+ and so when these two are mixed you get H2O so water and salts sometimes
HPO4-2 is an acid and a base. however when mixed with NO2- (Base) then HPO4-2 must be an acid.
There's no such thing as a base of an acid! A base is a substance with a pH of 8-14, and an acid is a base with a pH of 0-6. A neutral substance has a pH of 7.
NH2CH3 can be an acid or a base depending on what it is mixed with.
when an acid and a base combine, salt and water are formed. This process of reaction of an acid and base is called neutralisation.
A Salt and Water.
We get salt and water.This is called neutralization reaction
It is a chemical change. An acid and a base reacting to form a new substance.
a base is represented by OH- and an acid is H+ and so when these two are mixed you get H2O so water and salts sometimes
Am amphoteric substance can react as a base but also as an acid.
HPO4-2 is an acid and a base. however when mixed with NO2- (Base) then HPO4-2 must be an acid.
An Acid is a substance that tastes sour and Base is a substance that tastes bitter and feels slippery.
There's no such thing as a base of an acid! A base is a substance with a pH of 8-14, and an acid is a base with a pH of 0-6. A neutral substance has a pH of 7.
NH2CH3 can be an acid or a base depending on what it is mixed with.
Salts are made when an acid reacts with a base, carbonate or metal. The name of the salt formed depends on the metal in the base and the acid used. For example, salts made using hydrochloric acid are called chlorides
An acid base neutralization is not a substance as stated before but a reaction between acid molecules (or the protons from it) and a base compound (or basic ion in it). The products formed are normally a salt and water.Example:HCl + NaOH --> NaCl + H2O