Neutralization is a chemical reaction between an acid and a base. The products of all acid/base reactions is a SALT and WATER.
EXAMPLE:
HCl + NaOH --> NaCl + H2O
When an alkali cancels out an acid, it forms a neutral solution known as a salt. This reaction is called neutralization.
During a neutralisation reaction, the indicator changes color to indicate the pH change. For example, litmus paper turns red in an acidic solution, blue in a basic solution, and purple in a neutral solution. This color change helps to visually confirm when the reaction has reached equilibrium.
Carbon dioxide is a greenhouse gas given off during decomposition. When organic matter breaks down, it releases carbon dioxide into the atmosphere as a byproduct of microbial respiration.
Carbon dioxide (CO2) is a chemical that is given off during combustion and respiration, in addition to water vapor (H2O).
During cellular respiration, two things given off are carbon dioxide and water. These byproducts are released as a result of the breakdown of glucose and other molecules to produce energy.
it is a neutralisation reaction formed from an acid + base
Water and carbon dioxide are given off.
Oxygen
No, changing the concentration of an acid does not affect the temperature at neutralisation. The temperature change during neutralisation is determined by the amount of heat released or absorbed during the reaction, which is dependent on the specific acid and base involved, not their concentrations.
neutralisation reaction: n=vm2 + charlotte
Plants give off oxygen during photosynthesis and carbon dioxide during respiration.
A chemical reaction
oxygen.
helium and some neutrons
Carbon dioxide
CO2 and methane.
Oxygen gas