Universal indicator will turn red or pink in dilute hydrochloric acid.
Universal indicator turns red or pink in dilute hydrochloric acid because it indicates the presence of an acidic solution.
Litmus paper will turn red in dilute hydrochloric acid, indicating that the solution is acidic.
The natural color of dilute hydrochloric acid is colorless. It is a clear liquid with no distinct color.
Hydrochloric Acid is known to be a very strong acid. A 0.01 molar solution of HCl has a pH of 2 ( -log(0.01) ) which on the pH scale is very acidic (under 7 is acidic, 7 is neutral, over 7 is basic). On a universal indicator test, HCl would come out as red. A basic solution would be a more blue-green, or green depending on the concentration.This is a color chart for a universal indicator test:http://chem.csusb.edu/images/pH_chart.gif
The chemical formula for dilute hydrochloric acid is HCl.
Universal indicator turns red or pink in dilute hydrochloric acid because it indicates the presence of an acidic solution.
It can be green or blue.
Litmus paper will turn red in dilute hydrochloric acid, indicating that the solution is acidic.
The natural color of dilute hydrochloric acid is colorless. It is a clear liquid with no distinct color.
Blue
Hydrochloric Acid is known to be a very strong acid. A 0.01 molar solution of HCl has a pH of 2 ( -log(0.01) ) which on the pH scale is very acidic (under 7 is acidic, 7 is neutral, over 7 is basic). On a universal indicator test, HCl would come out as red. A basic solution would be a more blue-green, or green depending on the concentration.This is a color chart for a universal indicator test:http://chem.csusb.edu/images/pH_chart.gif
Dilute Household Ammonia or just normal ammonia would do the job.
yes dilute hydrochloric oxide is a strong acid
The chemical formula for dilute hydrochloric acid is HCl.
The chemical symbol for dilute hydrochloric acid is HCl.
Dilute hydrochloric acid has a lower concentration of HCl compared to concentrated hydrochloric acid. This means that there is less HCl in a given volume of dilute acid compared to concentrated acid. Dilute hydrochloric acid is typically less corrosive and has milder effects compared to concentrated hydrochloric acid.
Dilute hydrochloric acid typically has a pH around 1 to 2.