Mixing equal amounts of an acid and a base with the same pH value will create a neutral solution on the pH scale. Examples include mixing hydrochloric acid with sodium hydroxide or sulfuric acid with potassium hydroxide.
Any important phenomenon.
When Fehling A & B are mixed in equal quantities... Fehlings Reagent is formed which is DEEP BLUE in colour Hope that answers your question! :)
The water solution of Epsom salt is neutral.
Purple litmus (neutral) become red in acidic solutions.
When iodine solution is mixed with starch solution they produce blue-black color.
an universal indicator paper tells you how acid or how alkali it is acid - red alkali - blue neutral - green
It depends on the amount and the strength of the solutions. If both solutions are equal in volume and strength, then the base would neutralise the acid. Thus forming a neutral substance.
When an acid and alkaline solution are mixed, they neutralize each other, forming water and a salt. This reaction is known as a neutralization reaction. The pH of the resulting solution will be closer to neutral (pH 7) than the original solutions.
Any important phenomenon.
You can mix a basic solution with a pH higher than 7 with a pH 2 solution to yield a neutral mixture. The basic solution should be strong enough to neutralize the acidity of the pH 2 solution. Common bases like sodium hydroxide or potassium hydroxide can be used for this purpose.
dilution if the solutions do not react with each other. reaction if they do react. Mixing if the two solutions do not dissolve one another (such as a nonpolar solution mixed with a polar solution)
be immiscible. This means that the two solutions cannot be mixed together evenly and instead separate into distinct layers due to their differences in polarity or density.
The pH of the second solution must be neutral (pH 7), as mixing an acidic solution (pH 4) with a basic solution (pH 7) would result in a pH closer to 7. This indicates that the pH of the unknown solution is around 7 to yield a final pH of 5 when mixed with the pH 4 solution.
Solutes can be considered solids in liquid solutions. Solutes are substances that tend to only dissolve into a solution when properly mixed, heated, etc. Often times when put into a solution, a solute tends to not dissolve into a solution if not mixed. Salt, for example, must be properly mixed into water in order for it to dissolve.
When Fehling A & B are mixed in equal quantities... Fehlings Reagent is formed which is DEEP BLUE in colour Hope that answers your question! :)
The water solution of Epsom salt is neutral.
It will make a neutral shade of brown.