yes a strong acid would have a lower ph level
I would assume that iodine being a strong acid with a ph of aprox = 2 it would bring the neutrailty of NaCl to a lower hence more acidic ph.
strong acid
a strong acid is lower on the pH scale a strong base is higher on the pH scale
No, it is a very strong acid which means it has a low Ph level
A strong acid dissociates more, producing a greater concentration of H+ ions in solution, giving a lower pH than a weak acid.
liquid muriatic acid
pH of a strong acid would be '1' or '2' pH of a weak acid would be '5' or '6' . NB 'pH' is a logarithmic scale of the hydrogen ion content of a substance. The small/bigger the number, the greater/lesser the hydrogen ion content.
pH is not a measure of how strong an acid is, it is a measure of how acidic or basic a solution is. This depends on both the strength of the acid/base and how much is dissolved in a given amount of water. Any acid will produce a pH below 7, and a strong acid will usually produce a very low pH, but again, that depends on the concentration. However, a pH of 0-3 would be considered a strong acid. Yet concentrated glacial acetic acid although very corrosive and strong would not have a pH this low.
the lower the pH the stronger the acid
Strong acid = 1 pH ( or lower ) Strong base = 14 pH ( or higher ) Neutral solution = 7 pH
It would burn as acid is corrosive
Neither - soap is a base, with a basic - not acidic - pH level.