The answer might depend on what kind of solution you are talking about. If you start with water and add acid, you get a dilute solution of acid, then a more concentrated solution as you add more.
If you started pouring water into acid, you would initially get a very concentrated solution, then diluter as you add more water.
If you are in the lab with a beaker of acid and a beaker of water and need to mix them, always pour the acid into the the water, not the other way around. The mixing generates heat. There is a slight chance that the beaker could break or get knocked over just after you start mixing. Spilling hot acid with a little bit of water is far more dangerous than spilling hot water with a little bit of acid.
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∙ 13y agoWiki User
∙ 11y agoi think we add acid into a base,as we can observe it in the titration process.....
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∙ 12y agoFrom a safety standpoint, adding acid to the base carefully and slowly is best. The chemical result is still the same in that neutralization takes place.
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∙ 10y agoacid into base
An acid can turn into a base if you mix a much stronger base with it! That way the base acid overpowers the acid and makes the acid a base!
It is a base It is a base It is a base
Acid + base conjugate base + conjugate acid
Flour is a base, not an acid.
It is a Base.
An acid can turn into a base if you mix a much stronger base with it! That way the base acid overpowers the acid and makes the acid a base!
It is a base It is a base It is a base
Acid + base conjugate base + conjugate acid
Flour is a base, not an acid.
It is a Base.
The base which a certain acid turns into.Every acid had a conjugate base:HX (acid) X- (conjugate base)The acid is also called the base's conjugate acid.
Its a acid base simply acid ;)
Sulfuric Acid is a powerful acid and not a base.
An acid base imbalance can result in
acid. you can actually run batteries off it.
A base.
The methanol is a base not a acid