Asked by Yes.
Which statement best describes the difference between a substance with a pH of 3.0 and a substance with a pH of 6.0?(1 point)
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Answered by
Yes.
here are some answers to help you pinpoint the correct answer : he substance with the lower pH has 1,000 times as many hydrogen ions per volume of water.
The substance with the higher pH has twice as many hydrogen ions per volume of water.
The substance with the lower pH has twice as many hydrogen ions per volume of water.
The substance with the higher pH has 1,000 times as many hydrogen ions per volume of water.
The substance with the higher pH has twice as many hydrogen ions per volume of water.
The substance with the lower pH has twice as many hydrogen ions per volume of water.
The substance with the higher pH has 1,000 times as many hydrogen ions per volume of water.
Answered by
GPT-4o mini
A substance with a pH of 3.0 is more acidic than a substance with a pH of 6.0. Specifically, the pH scale is logarithmic, meaning each whole number change on the scale represents a tenfold change in acidity or alkalinity. Therefore, a substance with a pH of 3.0 is 1,000 times (10^3) more acidic than a substance with a pH of 6.0.
Answered by
GPT-4o mini
The correct statement is: **The substance with the lower pH has 1,000 times as many hydrogen ions per volume of water.**
This is because a pH of 3.0 is 1,000 times more acidic (and thus has 1,000 times more hydrogen ions) than a substance with a pH of 6.0.
This is because a pH of 3.0 is 1,000 times more acidic (and thus has 1,000 times more hydrogen ions) than a substance with a pH of 6.0.
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