No, lemon juice is acidic, it's citric acid.
no
No. Lemon juice is acidic, so it will have a lower pH.
When you mix lemon juice with bromothymol blue (BTB) solution, the color will change from blue to yellow. This is because the acidity of the lemon juice causes the BTB indicator to shift to its yellow color.
"Lemon juice". Lemon juice is a mixture, not a single compound, so it doesn't have a "chemical name". It's an aqueous solution of citric acid, ascorbic acid, and a number of other compounds.
no
If you put a teaspoon of lemon juice into a gallon of water, that would be an example of a diluted solution. Another word for dilute would be to make weaker.
acidic
Red in acidic solution
Soaps are alkali substances so by adding lemon juice (an acid substance) you will decrease the pH (because acid is low and alkaline is high) depening on the amount of lemon juice you add and the concentration of it would depend on your outcome, you may just make it slightly less alkali, you may neutralise it, or you may even acidify it if you were to add enough. I hope this was helpful :)
what is the conversion of concentrated lemon juice to the juice of a real lemon(in teaspoon)
When soap is mixed with lemon juice, a chemical reaction occurs due to the acidic nature of the lemon juice. This reaction can cause the soap to break down or curdle, leading to a less effective cleaning solution. It is best to avoid mixing soap with acidic substances like lemon juice for cleaning purposes.
an example could be vinegar or lemon juicehope that helped(:You can also use orage juice, soda, tomato juice, acid rain, Black coffee, eggs, sea water.