The strong alkali solutions will turn litmus blue, but there are many different indicators, each with their own color change to indicate basic solutions. Universal pH papers often turn dark purple on exposure to strongly basic solutions.
Here are a few!! : * Liquid drain cleaner * household lye * oven cleaner * bleaches * soapy water * baking soda * ammonia solution
Sodium hydroxide , as it can burn glass in a matter of seconds
Sodium Hydroxide - NaOH
light blue
purplish blue
It is phenyl Lithium C6H5-Li+
Sodium hydroxide
Bluish green :p
ph 8- p14 is a alkali. blue for weak alkali (ph 8) purple for strong alkali (ph14)
blue because it is a weak alkali
It is a strong, weak and medium acid, alkali and neutral
soap is a weak alkali
weak means that the colour it turns when you've added the alkali or the acid is a faint colour, not as dark as it should be.
Bluish green :p
ph 8- p14 is a alkali. blue for weak alkali (ph 8) purple for strong alkali (ph14)
blue because it is a weak alkali
It is a strong, weak and medium acid, alkali and neutral
weak alkali.
soap is a weak alkali
alkali
Strong Acid ; pH = 1-3 Weak acid ; pH = 4-6 Neutral ; pH 7 Weak alkali ; pH = 8 -10 ( The answer) Strong Alkali ; pH = 11- 14
weak
No. Ammonia is a weak alkali.
you create a neutral solution -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Well it depends actually it doesn't always create a neutral solution. Here's the order: Strong Alkali + Strong Acid = Neutralisation (water + salt) Strong Alkali + Weak Acid = Weak Alkali Weak Alkali + Weak Acid = Neutralisation ( water + salt) Weak Alkali + Strong Acid = Weak Acid Strong Alkali + Strong Acid = Neutralisation (water + salt) Hope it helps! :)