Sodium hydroxide is a base.
Neither is an acid. Both are bases, hydroxide is the stronger base.
Sulphur dioxide is more likely to react with hydrochloric acid than with sodium hydroxide. This is because sulphur dioxide reacts with water to form sulfurous acid, which then reacts with hydrochloric acid to form more stable compounds like sulfite salts.
Base
Sodium hydroxide is a base, not an acid, so 0%.
No, the hydroxide ion is a very strong base. but can be just as dangerous as a strong acid.
NH4OH is a weak base, not an acid. It is the chemical formula for ammonium hydroxide, which releases hydroxide ions (OH-) when dissolved in water, making it a base.
Ali3 is a base, specifically aluminum hydroxide.
No: Ammonium is a polyvalent cation that is not usually considered either an acid or a base. Ammonium hydroxide is a base that produces ammonium salts of the anions of an acid with which the ammonium hydroxide reacts.
No, far from it. Sodium hydroxide is one of if not the strongest know base.
Gallium hydroxide is a base. It is formed when gallium oxide reacts with water to produce hydroxide ions.
When an acid is mixed with a hydroxide base, a neutralization reaction occurs resulting in the formation of water and a salt. The hydrogen ions from the acid combine with the hydroxide ions from the base to form water, while the positive and negative ions from the acid and base combine to form a salt.