Combing an acid and a base produces a salt and water.
Here are the general acid equations.
Acid + Base = Salt + Water
Acid + Alkali = Salt + Water
Acid + Metal = Salt + Hydrogen
Acid + Carbonate = Salt + Water + Carbon Dioxide.
NB An Alkali is a soluble Base.
Neutralization reactions typically involve combining an acid and a base to form water and a salt. The acid donates a proton (H+) while the base accepts the proton to form water. The remaining ions from the acid and base combine to form a salt.
When an acid and a base react, they form a salt and water. This reaction is known as neutralization, and it results in the formation of ions from the acid and base combining to create a more neutral pH.
A salt can be made by combining an acid and a base together. When an acid and a base react, they form a salt and water in a chemical reaction called neutralization. So, combining materials like hydrochloric acid and sodium hydroxide can create sodium chloride, or table salt.
Acetamide is a weak base. It can undergo protonation to form the conjugate acid, acetic acid, in acidic solutions.
When a base reacts with an acid, they form a salt and water. The salt is the result of the neutralization reaction between the acid and base, where the H+ ions from the acid combine with the OH- ions from the base to form water, leaving behind the salt compound.
Combining_a_base_and_an_acid_form
a salt and water
Neutralization reactions typically involve combining an acid and a base to form water and a salt. The acid donates a proton (H+) while the base accepts the proton to form water. The remaining ions from the acid and base combine to form a salt.
When an acid and a base react, they form a salt and water. This reaction is known as neutralization, and it results in the formation of ions from the acid and base combining to create a more neutral pH.
A neutral substance.
salt and water.
I think Titration or Neutralisation is the word you're looking for here.
An acid and a base combining is called a neutralization reaction, and it forms salt and water.
Bromide is not, in an of itself, an acid or a base. Bromide is capable of combining with an H+ ion and then becomes Hydrobromic Acid. Due to Bromine's position on the periodic table it is likely to form acids, not bases.
Water plus a salt eg caustic soda + hydrochoric acid NaOH + HCl -> H2O + NaCl Some of these reactions can be explosive, so don't try it
A salt can be made by combining an acid and a base together. When an acid and a base react, they form a salt and water in a chemical reaction called neutralization. So, combining materials like hydrochloric acid and sodium hydroxide can create sodium chloride, or table salt.
Acetamide is a weak base. It can undergo protonation to form the conjugate acid, acetic acid, in acidic solutions.