Adding water dilutes the solution and will raise the pH of an acidic solution (which is to say, the solution becomes less acidic).
Adding water to an acidic solution will dilute the concentration of hydrogen ions, causing it to decrease. This is because the addition of water will increase the total volume of the solution while keeping the total amount of hydrogen ions constant.
To predict the acidity or basicity of a salt solution, we need to consider the ions it forms when dissolved in water. If the cation or anion of the salt is a strong acid or base, the solution will be neutral. If the cation is from a weak base and the anion is from a strong acid, the solution will be acidic. If the cation is from a strong base and the anion is from a weak acid, the solution will be basic.
No, a sugar and water solution is not inherently acidic. Sugar (sucrose) does not contain any free hydrogen ions to make the solution acidic. The pH of a sugar and water solution would be relatively neutral.
The solution of FeCl3 is acidic. This is because when FeCl3 dissolves in water, it forms Fe3+ ions and Cl- ions. The Fe3+ ions react with water to produce H+ ions, which makes the solution acidic.
Adding pure water to an acidic solution will dilute the solution, causing the pH to increase. This is because the concentration of H+ ions, which determine the acidity of the solution, decreases as more water is added.
Adding water to an acidic solution will dilute the concentration of hydrogen ions, causing it to decrease. This is because the addition of water will increase the total volume of the solution while keeping the total amount of hydrogen ions constant.
To predict the acidity or basicity of a salt solution, we need to consider the ions it forms when dissolved in water. If the cation or anion of the salt is a strong acid or base, the solution will be neutral. If the cation is from a weak base and the anion is from a strong acid, the solution will be acidic. If the cation is from a strong base and the anion is from a weak acid, the solution will be basic.
No, a sugar and water solution is not inherently acidic. Sugar (sucrose) does not contain any free hydrogen ions to make the solution acidic. The pH of a sugar and water solution would be relatively neutral.
Hydrochloric acid (HCl) will produce an acidic solution when dissolved in water.
water.
The water solution of an acidic salt has a pH under 7.
An acidic salt has in water solution a pH under 7.
The water solution is neutral.
The solution of FeCl3 is acidic. This is because when FeCl3 dissolves in water, it forms Fe3+ ions and Cl- ions. The Fe3+ ions react with water to produce H+ ions, which makes the solution acidic.
The solvent is generally water.
Adding pure water to an acidic solution will dilute the solution, causing the pH to increase. This is because the concentration of H+ ions, which determine the acidity of the solution, decreases as more water is added.
Yes, C2H5NH3Cl is acidic. When it dissolves in water, it releases a proton (H+) and forms an acidic solution.