not an acid at all
No, a strong acid and a weak base will not produce a neutral salt. Instead, the resulting salt will be acidic because the anion from the weak base does not fully neutralize the strong acid. This typically leads to a solution that is acidic when the salt is dissolved in water.
The solution of this salt has a pH under 7.
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.
A soap contains a strong alkali,because it produces OH- ions in the water.
Salt can be neutral, acidic, or basic. Salts are formed through the reaction of an acid and a base. If the reaction involves a strong acid and a strong base, the resulting salt is neutral (like NaCl table salt). A weak acid and a strong base result in a basic salt, and a strong acid and a weak base form an acid salt.
It is the product of a strong acid and a weak base, but is itself a mildly acidic salt.
Ephedrine sulfate will act as a weak acid in solution because yes it is the salt of a weak base (ephedrine) and a strong acid (sulfuric acid)
FeCl (Iron chloride) is not an acid, it is a salt. Therefore, it cannot be classified as a strong or weak acid.
you create a neutral solution -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Well it depends actually it doesn't always create a neutral solution. Here's the order: Strong Alkali + Strong Acid = Neutralisation (water + salt) Strong Alkali + Weak Acid = Weak Alkali Weak Alkali + Weak Acid = Neutralisation ( water + salt) Weak Alkali + Strong Acid = Weak Acid Strong Alkali + Strong Acid = Neutralisation (water + salt) Hope it helps! :)
No, a strong acid and a weak base will not produce a neutral salt. Instead, the resulting salt will be acidic because the anion from the weak base does not fully neutralize the strong acid. This typically leads to a solution that is acidic when the salt is dissolved in water.
A weak acid can be neutralized effectively by adding a strong base to it. The strong base will react with the weak acid to form water and a salt, which will result in the neutralization of the acid.
Each salt has it's own pH as different in it's constituents as if it formed from strog acid and strong base it will be neutral as between weak acid and weak base , And if formed from strong acid an weak base it will be acidic salt an so on ..........
It is an acidic salt because it is a salt of weak base and strong acid
When sodium chloride is added to a solution of a weak acid, the chloride ions from the salt will not react with the weak acid. However, the sodium ions can react with the weak acid to form a salt of the weak acid and a strong acid. This reaction can change the pH of the solution, depending on the relative strengths of the weak acid and the strong acid formed.
No, LiCN is not classified as a strong acid-strong base salt. It is the salt of lithium hydroxide (a strong base) and hydrocyanic acid (a weak acid), so it does not produce significant amounts of hydroxide or hydronium ions in solution.
Salts formed from strong acid and strong base are neither acidic nor basic. Salts formed from strong acid and weak base are slightly acidic. Salts formed from weak acid and strong base are slightly basic.
CoCO3 (Cobalt II carbonate) would be a weak base.