How do you measure the power of a chemical? That is not a scientifically measurable quantity.
Acid-- it has a ph of less than 7.
From 1-6 is an acid 7 is neutral 8-11 is a base. Hope this helps :) -Bookworm96
A conjugate base is formed when an acid loses a proton (H+), whereas HB represents the acid in its protonated form. The conjugate base has one less proton than the acid HB.
Anything with a pH less than 7 is an acid. Anything with a pH greater than 7 is a base. pH = 7 is neutral
Yes. A base has a pH of greater than 7. An acid has a pH of less than 7.
the product of a neutralization reaction have a pH of less than 7 when strong acid e.g HCl, HNO3, H2SO4, neutralized against weak base e.g NH4OH, Zn(OH)2 note : Salts from strong acid and weak base are acidic, The pH less than 7
A acid is 6 or less A Base is more than 8 7 is neither So is it is
ph level less than 7----->acid ph level more than 7----->base .....^_^....
An acidic solution has a pH less than 7, a basic solution has a pH greater than 7 while a pH of 7 is neutral.
The anion of a weak acid is typically called a conjugate base. It is formed when the weak acid donates a proton (H+) and becomes negatively charged. The conjugate base is usually less acidic than its parent weak acid.
Acids pH levels are below 7, while bases pH levels are above 7.
The stoichiometric point for a weak acid-strong base titration is generally greater than pH 7 because the titration involves adding a strong base (like NaOH) to a weak acid solution. At the stoichiometric point, all of the weak acid has been neutralized by the strong base, resulting in the formation of the conjugate base and water, which makes the solution slightly basic.