a salt and water.
NO, Acid and Bases react with each other to form salts and water
you have a poorly formatted question. when you combine acids and bases you get a neutral substance
"Polarity Portraits: The Dance of Acids and Bases"
Acids and bases combine in a neutralization reaction to form a salt and water. This reaction occurs when the H+ ions from the acid react with the OH- ions from the base to form water, while the remaining ions combine to form a salt.
acids and bases when combined neutralize one another and forms salt and water.
Strong acids and bases react in a neutralization reaction where the acidic hydrogen ions (H+) combine with the basic hydroxide ions (OH-) to form water (H2O). The remaining ions from the acid and base combine to form a salt. The reaction is exothermic and proceeds to completion.
Yes, acids and bases can react to form water and a salt through a neutralization reaction. In this reaction, the acid donates a proton (H+) to the base, forming water (H2O), and the remaining parts of the acid and base combine to form a salt.
The bases in nucleic acids are like the letters in the alphabet because they are the building blocks that combine in specific sequences to encode information, just like letters combine to form words and sentences. Each base has a specific structure and function that determines how genetic information is stored and transmitted.
Yes, concentrated acids and bases are more corrosive than dilute acids and bases
Of course they are. They are many acids and bases
bases neutralise the acids
Acids and bases!! hope this helps :)