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An indicator used to detect an acid or base is a substance that changes color in the presence of acids or bases. Examples of indicators include litmus paper, phenolphthalein, and universal indicator solution.
Red cabbage or beetroot juice will do the job.
There are various ways to test for an acid and an alkali. For acidic solution: Litmus paper/ litmus solution --> red Phenolphthalein --> colorless Methyl orange --> pink Universal Indicator (changes color according to the strength of acid) --> red to yellow. For alkaline solutions: Litmus paper/ litmus solution --> blue Phenolphthalein --> pink Methyl orange --> yellow Universal Indicator --> blue green to purple
A pH indicator is a substance that changes color based on the acidity or basicity of a solution. It is often used in chemistry experiments to determine the pH of a solution. Common pH indicators include litmus paper, phenolphthalein, and universal indicator.
Universal indicator covers a wider pH range compared to litmus indicator, which only detects acidic or basic conditions. Universal indicator provides a more precise indication of the pH level of a solution by producing a range of colors across the pH scale.
Phenolphthalein Litmus Red Litmus Blue Universal Indicator -> Most Common Methyl Orange :)
No totally different, universal indicator is a mixture of chemical which shows the precise p.H of a substance, blue litmus paper reveals whether the substance is acidic or alkaline.
An indicator used to detect an acid or base is a substance that changes color in the presence of acids or bases. Examples of indicators include litmus paper, phenolphthalein, and universal indicator solution.
Red cabbage or beetroot juice will do the job.
There are various ways to test for an acid and an alkali. For acidic solution: Litmus paper/ litmus solution --> red Phenolphthalein --> colorless Methyl orange --> pink Universal Indicator (changes color according to the strength of acid) --> red to yellow. For alkaline solutions: Litmus paper/ litmus solution --> blue Phenolphthalein --> pink Methyl orange --> yellow Universal Indicator --> blue green to purple
universal indicator or litmus paper
With a universal indicator or with litmus paper.
A pH indicator is a substance that changes color based on the acidity or basicity of a solution. It is often used in chemistry experiments to determine the pH of a solution. Common pH indicators include litmus paper, phenolphthalein, and universal indicator.
Universal indicator covers a wider pH range compared to litmus indicator, which only detects acidic or basic conditions. Universal indicator provides a more precise indication of the pH level of a solution by producing a range of colors across the pH scale.
If a substance is an acid, it would turn red on a pH indicator
An indicator is a substance that changes color in the presence of an acid or alkali. Common indicators include litmus paper (blue for alkaline, red for acidic), phenolphthalein (colorless in acidic solutions, pink in alkaline solutions), and universal indicator solution (multiple colors to indicate pH level).
A mixture of phenolphthalein, methyl orange, and litmus would typically result in a color that depends on the pH of the solution. Phenolphthalein is colorless in acidic solutions and turns pink in basic solutions, while methyl orange is red in acidic conditions and yellow in neutral to basic conditions. Litmus is red in acidic solutions and blue in basic ones. Therefore, the overall color would vary, likely appearing red in acidic environments and transitioning through shades of orange to yellow in neutral to basic conditions, depending on the dominant indicator's pH response.