It depends you can sometimes get an alkaline salt.if you use a strong acid and a weak base during neutralisation you will get an acidic salt (eg. Ammonia chloride. Made from hydrochloric acid and ammonia)
However, if you use a weak acid and a strong base during neutralisation you will get an alkaline salt (eg. Sodium ethanoate. Made from sodium hydroxide and ethanoic acid)
salt is an acid
Salt doesn't contain any acid.
It is an ACID . ( Hydro) Broic Acid.
The reaction between the salt of a carboxylic acid and HCl results in the formation of the carboxylic acid itself and the salt of hydrochloric acid. The general equation for this reaction is: Salt of carboxylic acid + HCl → Carboxylic acid + Salt of hydrochloric acid
Sulfuric acid is an acid. It is a strong mineral acid with the formula H2SO4. It is not a base or a salt.
It is not an acid. It is a salt. It is actually the salt we call salt (sodium chloride).
There several general equations:- they are: - Acid + Alkali = Salt + Water Acid + Base = Salt + Water Acid + Metal = Salt + Hydrogen Acid + Carbonate = Salt + Water + Carbon Dioxide.
Yes, a sodium fatty acid salt is a type of carboxylic acid salt. Fatty acids are carboxylic acids with long hydrocarbon chains, and when they react with a base like sodium hydroxide, they form carboxylic acid salts such as sodium fatty acid salts.
NaH2PO4 is an acid salt because it is derived from a weak acid (H3PO4) and a strong base (NaOH). This salt will have acidic properties when dissolved in water.
NO!!!! Remember the general acid reaction equations. Acid + Base = Salt +Water Acid +Alkali = Salt + Water Acid +Metal = Salt + Hydrogen Acid + Carbonate = Salt + Water + Carbon Dioxide. NB An Alkali is a soluble Base.
salt as metal + acid ---> salt and another thingy
RaCO3 is a salt, specifically an acidic salt. It is formed by the reaction of an acid (carbonic acid) and a base (radium hydroxide).