No, an acid with a pH of 1 is stronger than an acid with a pH of 5. The pH scale is logarithmic, so each unit change represents a tenfold difference in acidity. A lower pH indicates a higher concentration of hydrogen ions and a stronger acid.
"Ph1" doesn't have a recognized meaning or context in English language or commonly used terminology. If you provide more information or context, I may be able to help further.
pH1 likely refers to a solution's pH level being close to 1, indicating a very acidic solution. pH is a measure of the acidity or basicity of a solution on a scale of 0-14, with lower values indicating greater acidity.
The pH value of neutralisation is pH7 because pH1 is a strong acid, pH14 is a strong alkali. However I to am trying to find the word equation as I have a test tomorrow that I need to revise for. Good luck hope this has helped
Sheer speculation. Balanced equation first. CuO + 2HCl >> CuCl2 + H2O I would speculate that the Copper (II) Chloride in percipitating did not eliminate all H(+) and Cl(-) ions, so pH is still high.
Strong Acid
tin and paint and ph1 acid in the battery
it is the strongest acid e.g battery acid
A liquid with a pH of 1 is considered very acidic. This level of acidity can be found in hydrochloric acid or stomach acid.
No, an acid with a pH of 1 is stronger than an acid with a pH of 5. The pH scale is logarithmic, so each unit change represents a tenfold difference in acidity. A lower pH indicates a higher concentration of hydrogen ions and a stronger acid.
5
Nucleic acid pH ranges from pH1- pH6 being pH7 neutral. 1.1 is Hydrochloric acid and 1.2 - 5.1 being Sulfuric acid. From 5.2- pH7 is Boric acid. The closer the pH is to 7 the more weaker it is the further the weaker. One type is vinegar with pH3 it is a strong nucleic acid.
PH 6 is much less acidic. An example of Ph 6 is milk. Whereas Ph1 is stomach acid (very acidic) :)
Battery acid typically has a pH level below 1, making it extremely acidic. It can be very corrosive and dangerous if not handled properly.
The term "ph1" does not have a standard meaning in mathematics or science. It appears to be an incomplete or incorrect reference. If you can provide more context or clarify the question, I'd be happy to help with finding a solution.
"Ph1" doesn't have a recognized meaning or context in English language or commonly used terminology. If you provide more information or context, I may be able to help further.
An acid would have a smaller than PH7 number. Hydrochloric being around PH1. Adding a caustic hydroxl with a pH (much) higher than 7 would bring the acid into ph7 range and make it a salt. Best done with the PH meter sampling the mix.