The pH scale ranges from 1 to 14 based on the log of the concentration of hydronium in the solution. A pH of 1 indicates the most concentration acid we can find or create and a pH of 14 is the most dilute concentration of hydronium ion we can find or create.
0-14, 7 is neutral, anything greater than 7 is a base, anything less than 7 is an acid
do you mean the full pH range? the pH range varies from 1-14 with 1 being the most acidic, 7 neutral, and 14 the most alkaline
7-14 is the range of base in a pH scale
pH depends on concentration. Strong bases are for example: NaOH KOH Ca(OH)2 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Base_(chemistry)
1 is strong acid 7 is neutral 14 is strong alkaline
1 TO 14
1-14
0-14, 7 is neutral, anything greater than 7 is a base, anything less than 7 is an acid
do you mean the full pH range? the pH range varies from 1-14 with 1 being the most acidic, 7 neutral, and 14 the most alkaline
The range of pH values is 0 - 14.
7-14 is the range of base in a pH scale
Technically, the pH range is 0 to 14. 0 to 7 is acidic, 7 is neutral, and 7 to 14 is basic. However, in very rare situations, an acid can have a pH of -1 and a base can have a pH of 15. But I doubt you need to know that.
pH ranges from 1 (acid) to 14 (base). As far as acceptble range, you need to make clearer what else you need to know...like pH range of blood.
PH can be less than 0 and it can be more than 14. PH is -log of (H ) concentration. According to this the PH Of 1 M strong acid such as Hcl would be 0. similarly ... 10 M = pH -1 0.1 M = pH 1 0.01M = PH 2 0.001M = PH 3 0.0001M = PH 4 The pH scale is between 0-14 because the solution with which we generally encounter is in 0-14 range.
This range is only a convention.
Yes. A very strong acid - say 10M HCl would have a pH of -log10 [10] = -1. 1M HCl has a pH of zero. Strengths of acid betwen 1 and 10Molar woul be less than zero pH. However, the scale was designed to be practical and most pHs are indeed 0-14.
pH depends on concentration. Strong bases are for example: NaOH KOH Ca(OH)2 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Base_(chemistry)