Fdf
Because Hydrochloric acid is an acid, phenolphthalein would be clear. In bases Phenolphtlalein becomes pink
It should be clear. Phenolphthalein doesn't change color in the presence of an acid, only a base.
Orange in acidColourless in neutral solutionsPink/ purple in alkalisactually you are wrong the correct answer for this is....clear acidic solutionspink in basic solutionsand a pinkish-clear colour in neutral solutionsyou shouldn't always believe what you read i have this confirmed from my textbook which is by far a better source.
No, phenolphthalein remains colourless in the presence of an acid.
Add an acid.
Fdf
Because Hydrochloric acid is an acid, phenolphthalein would be clear. In bases Phenolphtlalein becomes pink
It should be clear. Phenolphthalein doesn't change color in the presence of an acid, only a base.
Orange in acidColourless in neutral solutionsPink/ purple in alkalisactually you are wrong the correct answer for this is....clear acidic solutionspink in basic solutionsand a pinkish-clear colour in neutral solutionsyou shouldn't always believe what you read i have this confirmed from my textbook which is by far a better source.
No, phenolphthalein remains colourless in the presence of an acid.
phenolphthalein only turns pink in a solution that is a base. Hydrochloric acid is obviously an acid.
we know that hcl is an acid and acids change purple phenolphthalein to colourless. So HCL changes purple phenolphthalein to colourless
Phenolphtalein is an indicator used to find the endpoint of a reaction (specifically an acid-base reaction). It has a pH range of 8.3 to 10.0 which means it can be used for a strong acid to strong base titration or a weak base to strong acid titration. Phenolphthalein is clear when it is in the presence of acid and pink when it is in the presence of a base.
Phenolphthalein dissolves in water to get a clear transparent solution.
Phenoxide and Hydrochloric acid: C6H5O-Na+ + HCL ----> C6H5OH + NaCl
no, acids do