The solution of this salt has a pH under 7.
It is a salt formed from strong acid and strong base and hence it is neither acidic nor basic.
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.
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.
A Salt.
How about the ever faithful hydrochloric acid and sodium hydroxide: HCl + NaOH --> NaCl + H20. Strong Acid + Strong Base = Salt & Water
When a strong acid and a strong base are combined, the products formed are salt and water. The salt is a neutral compound composed of the positive ion from the base and the negative ion from the acid.
Strong Acid + Strong Base ---> Neutral Salt + Water
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.
A salt is formed when a strong acid reacts with a strong base.
When mixing a strong acid with a strong base, a neutralization reaction occurs, resulting in the formation of water and a salt. The strong acid donates a proton (H+) to the strong base, which accepts the proton (OH-) to form water. The remaining ions from the acid and base combine to form a salt.
KCl is neither an acid or base but a neutral salt.
The products of a strong acid-base titration are water and a salt. The salt is formed from the cation of the base and the anion of the acid used in the titration.
When a strong acid combines with a strong base, a neutral solution of a salt and water is formed through a process known as neutralization. This reaction involves the transfer of protons from the acid to the base, resulting in the formation of water and a salt compound.
It becomes a neutral eg; acid plus base equals salt(product made) plus hydrogen gas.
NaCl is a salt formed by combination of a strong acid and a strong base, so it can't be put in simple acid or base category.
It is a salt formed from strong acid and strong base and hence it is neither acidic nor basic.
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)