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The pH of hydrochloric acid has a pH of 2.
The lower the pH number, the stronger the acid. a pH below 7 is acidic.
can you be more specific? "the" acid? pH of buffered solutions generally will not change upon dilution, following the henderson-hasselbach. however, pH of strong acids will change, following the standard equation: pH = -log[H+] yerp
pH of nitric acid is '1' or '2'
A strong acid id PH 1 or 2 and a weak acid is a number between 5 or 6 Not 7 because that is neutral
The pH of hydrochloric acid has a pH of 2.
The lower the pH number, the stronger the acid. a pH below 7 is acidic.
A number less than a pH of 4 indicates a strong acid.
Any pH less than seven is considered an acid.
The pH number will be higher
pH of nitric acid is '1' or '2'
can you be more specific? "the" acid? pH of buffered solutions generally will not change upon dilution, following the henderson-hasselbach. however, pH of strong acids will change, following the standard equation: pH = -log[H+] yerp
A strong acid id PH 1 or 2 and a weak acid is a number between 5 or 6 Not 7 because that is neutral
0 - 6.9 The lower the pH number the higher the concentration of hydronium ions and higher the strength of acid
The pH could vary from 4.5 to 6.9 depending on the nature of the acid used.
The pH lowers from around 14 to a lower number as acid is added.
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