Acid: red
Base: blue
Neutral: green
Anything with a pH of 7 is neutral
milk is an acid (barely... It is very close to neutral)
A neutral solution is true neutral with a pH of 7,00.
Milk has a pH slightly acidic.
To determine which solution would require the greatest amount of base to reach a neutral pH, you would look for the solution with the lowest initial pH. For example, a strong acid solution, such as hydrochloric acid (HCl) at a low concentration (e.g., pH 1), would require significantly more base to neutralize it compared to a solution with a pH closer to neutral, like a weak acid solution. The greater the acidity (lower pH), the more base is needed to achieve a neutral pH of 7.
Water is neutral, with a pH of 7. It is not an acid or a base.
pH<7 acid pH=7 neutral pH>7 base
pH<7 acid pH=7 neutral pH>7 base
An example of something with the pH of 7 is simply water. A pH of 7 is neutral, so it is neither an acid or a base. It's just neutral.
Anything with a pH of 7 is neutral
To make an acid or a base neutral, you can add a substance called a neutralizer. For acids, you can add a base (like sodium hydroxide), and for bases, you can add an acid (like hydrochloric acid). The neutralizer will react with the acid or base to form water and a salt, resulting in a neutral pH.
Acid solution is not neutral, neutral is PH=7, so you need to add base until PH=7
A salt is neither an acid nor a base. It is formed by the reaction between an acid and a base, resulting in an ionic compound that is typically neutral in pH.
Strong acid = 1 pH ( or lower ) Strong base = 14 pH ( or higher ) Neutral solution = 7 pH
a weak acid
No, acid will have pH 1-6.9; 7 is neutral and 7.1-14 is a base.
If it is an acid then add a base until the pH level becomes 7, which is neutral. If it is a base, add acid until the pH is seven.