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YES, because of equal amount of hydrogen and hydroxide ions in the solution.
The point at which the greatest possible amount of a substance has been absorbed by a solution at a given temperature. Any excess amount of that substance will "fall out" of the solution as a precipitate. Saturation point occurs when water being evaporated equals the amount being condensed. -Qwasas
If you mix an neutral and an acid, The pH of the solution will be closer to 7 (neutral).Also if you mix an acid with an alkali (providing they are around the same strengh) it will turn neutral. Its like mixing orange juice with water, The juice is acid and the water is neutral, put water in the juice and it become weaker.
The amount of base needed to neutralize an acid depends on the alkalinity of the acid and of the base. ------------------ Because some salts formed during the neutralization form non-neutral water solutions.
Such a solution would be termed "dilute" as opposed to a "concentrated" or "saturated" solution containing either a great amount of solute, or the entire amount of solute possible in a particular solvent.
gastric juice at pH 2
neutral
It begins with e
pH7 which is neutral and is normally the colour green
YES, because of equal amount of hydrogen and hydroxide ions in the solution.
The point at which the greatest possible amount of a substance has been absorbed by a solution at a given temperature. Any excess amount of that substance will "fall out" of the solution as a precipitate. Saturation point occurs when water being evaporated equals the amount being condensed. -Qwasas
If you mix an neutral and an acid, The pH of the solution will be closer to 7 (neutral).Also if you mix an acid with an alkali (providing they are around the same strengh) it will turn neutral. Its like mixing orange juice with water, The juice is acid and the water is neutral, put water in the juice and it become weaker.
a neutral object is an object that has the same amount of positives as negatives
Al2O3 as it produces most ions in solution.
The amount of electrons is balanced by the same amount of protons in a neutral atom, such as for the neutral hydrogen atom; it has 1 proton and 1 electron.
The electrons are equal to the amount of protons in that neutral atom.
an infinite amount