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The volume of 100 millilitre of hydrochloric acid is:100 mL
Yes. It is an acid as its name would imply.
30 liters
There is no definite pH of hydrochloric acid or any other substance. pH is a measure of the concentration of hydrogen ions in a solution which depends on both how strong an acid or base is and how concentrated it is (how much is dissolved in a given volume of water). Because hydrochloric acid is a strong acid the pH can be calculated as the negative logarithm (base 10) of its molar concentration up to a pH of 7.
71.4mL of 1.75 M hydrochloric acid must be diluted with water to prepare 0.500 L of 0.250 M hydrochloric acid.
The buret is a device to preciseely measure volume while being able to deliver a varying amount of stuff. If youare assuming that the volume you have so accurately measured is of, say, hydrochloric acid, and then you end up with an air bubble (not hydrochloric acid) then the precise volume reading on the buret is inaccurate.
because pH is the measure of how much acid it contains it would change if you added more
graduate cylinder
Hydrochloric Acid would be the stronger acid, as Sodium Hydroxide is an alkali.
No, the hydrochloric acid being strong would precipitate the rosin acid out anyway.
Hydrochloric Acid would be the stronger acid, as Sodium Hydroxide is an alkali.
It would very much depend on the strength of the acid, which you do not indicate. Your stomach is already full of hydrochloric.