pH is a measure of how acidic or basic a solution is. The lower the pH, the more acidic the solution. A solution's ability to neutralize acid is measured by its pH level and its buffering capacity, which is the solution's ability to resist changes in pH when an acid or base is added.
I'm assuming you mean a salt neutralising an acid or base- This can not actually happen, because a salt is already 'Neutralised' An acid can neutralise a base, and a base neutralise an acid, but when Base+Acid reacts, a salt is formed. Adding a salt to a acid or base solution will only make it salty.
It depends on the amount and the strength of the solutions. If both solutions are equal in volume and strength, then the base would neutralise the acid. Thus forming a neutral substance.
A Nitrate salt depending on what was used to neutralise the acid. E.g. If you used copper to neutralise the nitric acid then copper nitrate would be produced.
No, ethanoic acid (acetic acid) cannot neutralize nitric acid. Nitric acid is a strong acid and acetic acid is a weak acid, so the reaction between them would not result in neutralization.
Acetic acid dissociates into hydrogen ions (H+) and acetate ions (CH3COO-) in aqueous solutions. This process is reversible, with the ability to reform acetic acid molecules.
by mixing it with base
base
by the addition of base
any base
It will neutralise the alkali and then turn the liquid to an acid.
Yes. Ammonia is a base that will neutralize sulfuric acid.
Add a base, such as NaOH, NH3, or LiOH
pH = 7.00 at 25oC
by adding acid (vinegar works)
Adding an acid the pH decrease.
Powdered lime, to neutralise the acid.
I'm assuming you mean a salt neutralising an acid or base- This can not actually happen, because a salt is already 'Neutralised' An acid can neutralise a base, and a base neutralise an acid, but when Base+Acid reacts, a salt is formed. Adding a salt to a acid or base solution will only make it salty.