A neutral solution can refer to many things, though I assume you mean in terms of pH. Neutral solutions have a pH of 7. Pure water has this pH value.
neither, a common salt solution is neutral
A solution of barium bromide would be neutral since barium bromide is a salt that dissociates into barium ions and bromide ions in water. Neither of these ions will significantly affect the pH of the solution.
Potassium perchlorate is a neutral salt, so when it dissolves in water it will not significantly affect the pH of the solution. Therefore, the pH of a 0.10M solution of potassium perchlorate would be close to neutral, around 7.
Technically it is called water because the positive hydrogen ions and the negative hydroxide ions would attract to form a compound with two hydrogen molecules and one oxygen molecule. H2O. This occurs most often in acid-base neutralization reaction where water is a product of the reactions.
The dissociation constant of ethanol (C2H5OH) is not applicable as it does not dissociate into ions in aqueous solution. Ethanol remains as a neutral molecule in solution.
A neutral solution is a solution that has a pH level of seven. Pure water is an example of a neutral solution.
The PH neutral solution in sciences is 7 and neutral is green.
A neutral solution is true neutral with a pH of 7,00.
Neutral in what sense? Guessing pH a neutral solution has a pH of 7.
Ultrapure water is a neutral solution.
No milk is not a neutral solution
Sodium chloride solution in water is neutral.
A neutral solution will turn universal indicator green.
can iodine be released in neutral solution by iodate?
Neutral
neutral solution does not contain free ions.
Anything with a pH of 7 is neutral