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To neutralise a strong acid, you would need a strong alkali (or lots of a weak alkali, but that would be impractical). Potassium hydroxide, sodium hydroxide, lithium hydroxide, calcium hydroxide, calcium hydroxide and magnesium hydroxide would all work.
To neutralize an acid, you can add a base. For example, mixing vinegar (an acid) with baking soda (a base) creates carbon dioxide gas and water. To neutralize an alkali, you can add an acid. For instance, mixing a solution of sodium hydroxide (an alkali) with hydrochloric acid would form water and a salt.
When an acid and an alkali or base neutralize each other, they form salt and water. This is a chemical reaction where the H+ ions from the acid react with the OH- ions from the alkali to form water, while the remaining ions combine to form a salt.
Yes, alkali can neutralize acid by reacting with it to form water and a salt. The reaction between an acid and an alkali is known as neutralization. The resulting solution typically has a pH closer to 7, which is considered neutral.
It is an acid. Acids have a pH below 7 and can neutralize alkalis by reacting with them to form water and a salt.
To neutralise a strong acid, you would need a strong alkali (or lots of a weak alkali, but that would be impractical). Potassium hydroxide, sodium hydroxide, lithium hydroxide, calcium hydroxide, calcium hydroxide and magnesium hydroxide would all work.
It will neutralise the alkali and then turn the liquid to an acid.
alkali bases pH greater than 7
To neutralize an acid, you can add a base. For example, mixing vinegar (an acid) with baking soda (a base) creates carbon dioxide gas and water. To neutralize an alkali, you can add an acid. For instance, mixing a solution of sodium hydroxide (an alkali) with hydrochloric acid would form water and a salt.
When an acid and an alkali or base neutralize each other, they form salt and water. This is a chemical reaction where the H+ ions from the acid react with the OH- ions from the alkali to form water, while the remaining ions combine to form a salt.
The alkali in the Rennie tablets neutralize the Hydrochloric acid in the stomach.
I think Alkali, because the bite is acidic. You have to use alkali to try and neutralise it. ~Shadow-siren-vivian
It would depend on which acid and alkali were involved, the general rule is that adding an acid to an alkali will produce a salt and water. Sulphuric acid and sodium hydroxide would give sodium sulphate + water Hydrochloric acid and potassium carbonate would give potassium chloride and water and carbon dioxide etc
Yes, alkali can neutralize acid by reacting with it to form water and a salt. The reaction between an acid and an alkali is known as neutralization. The resulting solution typically has a pH closer to 7, which is considered neutral.
you create a neutral solution -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Well it depends actually it doesn't always create a neutral solution. Here's the order: Strong Alkali + Strong Acid = Neutralisation (water + salt) Strong Alkali + Weak Acid = Weak Alkali Weak Alkali + Weak Acid = Neutralisation ( water + salt) Weak Alkali + Strong Acid = Weak Acid Strong Alkali + Strong Acid = Neutralisation (water + salt) Hope it helps! :)
The answer is...RED!!!!Strong Alkali is DARK BLUE!!!
A wasp sting is alkali, so if you put an alkali on it, it would not work. To neutralise the sting, you would have to use something acidic, like vinegar, also known as acetic acid. If you want to know more, then I can tell you about bee stings. Bee stings are acidic, so you shouldn't put something acidic on it. Try something alkali, like baking soda, or ammonia. That should help to neutralise the bee sting. Hope that helps x