Asked by erika
What is a neutralization reaction?
A. A reaction that involves neutral reactants
B. A reaction in which the reactants are a salt and water
C. A reaction in which the product is either acidic or basic
D. A reaction that removes essentially all H+ and OH-
I know that it isn't A or D. I don't think that it is B as the products are a salt and water, and I don't think it is C either... What do you think?
A. A reaction that involves neutral reactants
B. A reaction in which the reactants are a salt and water
C. A reaction in which the product is either acidic or basic
D. A reaction that removes essentially all H+ and OH-
I know that it isn't A or D. I don't think that it is B as the products are a salt and water, and I don't think it is C either... What do you think?
Answers
Answered by
bobpursley
I think you are wrong. Relook at answer D. What happens to the excess H+ in the acid, and the OH- in the base? They combine, and "dissapear" into water.
Answered by
erika
The titration of HCl with NaOH is an example of:
A. a strong acid-weak base titration.
B. a weak acid-weak base titration.
C. a weak acid-strong base titration.
D. a strong acid-strong base titration.
I know that this is a strong acid but not sure about the base? what do you think?
A. a strong acid-weak base titration.
B. a weak acid-weak base titration.
C. a weak acid-strong base titration.
D. a strong acid-strong base titration.
I know that this is a strong acid but not sure about the base? what do you think?
Answered by
DrBob222
NaOH is a strong base.
Answered by
Stone cold
D. A reaction that removes essentially all H+ and OH-
Answered by
David
d. strong-strong
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