Mineral acids are non-organic acids. Sulfuric, nitric, hydrochloric, and phosphoric acids are probably the most important commercially, though they're certainly not the only mineral acids. "Concentrated" generally means "the standard purity supplied by manufacturers." This varies quite a bit depending on the exact acid; it can be nearly pure (sulfuric or nitric acids), somewhat less so (phosphoric acid, typically about 70%), or quite a bit less (hydrochloric acid at around 38% or so).
Drinking squash, concentrated vegetable boullion (stock), some fruit juices are concentrated then diluted again... basically anything that has been boiled to remove the water content is "concentrated".
Concentrated means that something occurs a lot in a given volume. For instance, concentrated hydrochloric acid will contain many molecules of hydrochloric acid in a given volume of water. In a typical chemistry scenario, concentration can be applied to acids. This is generally measured in mols per dm3. A high concentration acid will contain lots of molecules, whereas a low concentration one will contain few. This is not to be confused with weak and strong acids however - that is to do with how ionised they are in solution!
A dilute acid is one that is not very concentrated. You can make an acid solution more dilute by adding water. Note that you have to be careful with the terms strong and weak; very strong acids can also be very dilute. Strong and weak characterize the acid's ability to dissociate in an aqueous solution, independent of concentration.
Neither. Omega-6 and Omega-3 fatty acids are known as essential fatty acids linoleic acid and alpha-linolenic acid are members of the fatty acid families. Both are polyunsaturated, and can beused as a source of energy, and are stored in fat tissue. Because they are essential, both linoleic and alpha-linolenic acid are required in the diet.
because anyone could slip on it. because anyone could slip on it.
yes
Sulfuric acid is a strong mineral acid with the chemical formula H2SO4. It is colorless, odorless, and highly corrosive in its concentrated form.
Yes, concentrated sulfuric acid is a liquid.
concentrated nitric acid concentrated sulphuric acid
A concentrated acid is typically represented by the symbol "H+".
a strong acid like HF, H2SO4...are stronger when they are concentrated, weaker acids are weak even they are concentrated
A concentrated acid is more dangerous than a dilute acid.
Examples: - concentrated solution of sulfuric acid - concentrated solution of nitric acid - concentrated solution of ethanol - concentrated solution of sugar (syrup) - concentrated solution of table salt
Concentrated sulfuric acid is more corrosive than concentrated sodium hydroxide solution. Sulfuric acid is a strong mineral acid that can cause severe burns upon contact with skin, while sodium hydroxide, also known as caustic soda, is a strong base that can cause similar damage but is generally less corrosive than sulfuric acid.
The same reason sticking your face into concentrated acid is.
A concentrated acid is more dangerous.
To prepare a dilute acid solution from a concentrated acid, you can slowly add the concentrated acid to water while stirring. Never add water to concentrated acid as it can cause splattering. Always add acid to water to ensure proper mixing and to prevent violent reactions. Mix well after adding the acid to ensure uniform dilution.