Yes, as it will serve to dilute the concentration of the sodium hydroxide being placed in the buret. You will being adding a known concentration of sodium hydroxide and ending up with an unknown concentration.
Sodium hydroxide simply becomes ionized in water, no reaction will occur. And the concentration of NaOH will be reduced, if enough water is added.
The chemical name is Sodium Hydroxide. It is made of Na+ ions and OH- ions.
Potassium Hydroxide is stronger than sodium hydroxide
Copper chloride + Sodium hydroxide --> Copper hydroxide + sodium chloride
Yes. Distilled water is neutral so would turn the paper green. Sodium hydroxide is an alkali so would turn the paper blue/purple. Ethanoic acid is an acid so would turn the paper red/orange.
Yes, as it will serve to dilute the concentration of the sodium hydroxide being placed in the buret. You will being adding a known concentration of sodium hydroxide and ending up with an unknown concentration.
Yes, as it will serve to dilute the concentration of the sodium hydroxide being placed in the buret. You will being adding a known concentration of sodium hydroxide and ending up with an unknown concentration.
30 gm of sodium hydroxide desolved in 1 litre distilled water.
Sodium hydroxide simply becomes ionized in water, no reaction will occur. And the concentration of NaOH will be reduced, if enough water is added.
Yep, everything with 'hydroxide' can be called an alkali no matter its state of matter. :)
The chemical name is Sodium Hydroxide. It is made of Na+ ions and OH- ions.
16.5g 97% pure NaOH pellets dissoved in 1 litre of distilled
Sodium hydroxide is basic.
sodium hydroxide is itself a chemical. It can disassociate into a sodium cation and a hydroxide anion
Just dissolve 8g solid NaOH in 100 mls. distilled water.
No, sodium hydroxide is a compound.
Potassium Hydroxide is stronger than sodium hydroxide