A substance
Salt
When an acid and an alkali or base neutralize each other, they form salt and water. This is a chemical reaction where the H+ ions from the acid react with the OH- ions from the alkali to form water, while the remaining ions combine to form a salt.
When an acid and a base neutralize each other, they form salt and water as products. The salt is typically composed of the cation from the base and the anion from the acid. The reaction is called a neutralization reaction.
When an acid and base neutralize each other, they react to form water and a salt. This is a chemical reaction in which the acidic hydrogen ion from the acid combines with the basic hydroxide ion from the base to form water, while the remaining ions combine to form a salt.
When an acid and an alkali or base neutralize each other, they form water and a salt. This process is known as neutralization. The resulting salt is composed of the positive ion from the alkali or base and the negative ion from the acid.
When an acid and a base neutralize each other, they form water and a salt. The salt formed will depend on the specific acid and base that reacted.
When an acid and a base are combined, they react to form water and a salt. This reaction is known as neutralization, where the acidic properties of the acid and the basic properties of the base are neutralized by each other.
They form salt and in most of the cases also the water molecules.
If acid & base are combined a neutal substance is produced.
When an acid and a base are mixed together, they neutralize each other to form water and a salt. The reaction between an acid and a base is known as a neutralization reaction. The salt formed depends on the specific acid and base that are mixed.
Each cationic acid HA+, when it donates ONE proton H+, will form its conjugated base A of the acid HA+. (Example: NH4+ ammonium, acid NH3 ammonia, base)Each neutral acid HA, when it donates ONE proton H+, will form its conjugated base A- of the acid HA. (Example: CH3COOH acetic acid CH3COO- acetate, base)Each anionic acid HA-, when it donates ONE proton H+, will form its conjugated base A2- of the acid HA-. (Example: HS- (mono)hydrogen sulfide, acid S2- sulfide, base)Each anionic base HA-, when it adopts ONE proton H+, will form its conjugated acid H2A of the base HA-. (Example: HS- mono-hydrogen sulfide, base H2S di-hydrogen sulfide, acid)Each anionic base A-, when it adopts ONE proton H+, will form its conjugate acid HA of base A-. (Example: CH3COO- acetate, base CH3COOH acetic acid)Each neutral base A, when it adopts ONE proton H+, will form its conjugate acid HA of base A-. (Example: NH3 ammonia, base NH4+ ammonium, acid)
In acid base neutralisation, both the acid and the base react with each other to form salt and water. Ex: hcl+naoh --> nacl + hoh here, acid-hcl base-naoh salt-nacl water-hoh