Chemists classify substances which are neither acidic or basic as neutral. Water, sodium chloride [NaCl], and table sugar (sucrose, C12H22O11) are all examples of chemically neutral compounds.
An aqueous solution of LiC2H3O2 is slightly basic. This is because the acetate ion (C2H3O2−) is the conjugate base of acetic acid, which is a weak acid. The presence of this ion makes the solution slightly basic.
Urea is a neutral compound. It is neither acidic nor basic in aqueous solutions.
It is a neutral salt but its aqueous solution is acidic in nature.
Methyl is neither acidic nor basic. It is a neutral compound.
Water is neutral, with a pH of 7. It is neither acidic nor basic.
An aqueous solution of LiC2H3O2 is slightly basic. This is because the acetate ion (C2H3O2−) is the conjugate base of acetic acid, which is a weak acid. The presence of this ion makes the solution slightly basic.
It is neutral.
basic
Urea is a neutral compound. It is neither acidic nor basic in aqueous solutions.
Tomato is acidic.
Acidic
Basic.
It is basic.
basic
It is a neutral salt but its aqueous solution is acidic in nature.
Methyl is neither acidic nor basic. It is a neutral compound.
pH = 2.2 is VERY Acidic. The pH range is 0 to 14. pH from 0 to 6 is acidic pH = 7 is neutral (water) pH from 8 to 14 is basic. 'pH' means the' negative logarithm , to the base '10', of the hydrogen ion concentration ' . Mathematically it is pH = -log(10) [H^(+)] Inverting [H^(+)] = 10^(-pH) So for a pH = 2.2 [H^(+)] = 10^(-2.2) = 0.0063....