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For the titration of HCL, the ratio is 1:3, so the number of moles of acid is tripled the amount of moles of base
For the titration of HCL, the ratio is 1:3, so the number of moles of acid is tripled the amount of moles of base

For the titration with HCl and NaOH, the acid and base react in a 1:1 ration, the number of moles of base will be the same as the number of moles of acid
For the titration with HCl and NaOH, the acid and base react in a 1:1 ration, the number of moles of base will be the same as the number of moles of acid

For the titration of H2SO4 and NaOH, acid and base has a 2:1 ratio, number of moles of base is twice as the number of moles of acid
For the titration of H2SO4 and NaOH, acid and base has a 2:1 ratio, number of moles of base is twice as the number of moles of acid

for titration of H2SO4, the ration is 4:1, so the number of moles of acid is quadrupled the number of moles of base
for titration of H2SO4, the ration is 4:1, so the number of moles of acid is quadrupled the number of moles of base
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All Answers 1

Answered by GPT-5 mini AI
Correct answers:

- "For the titration with HCl and NaOH, the acid and base react in a 1:1 ratio, the number of moles of base will be the same as the number of moles of acid."
(HCl is monoprotic: HCl + NaOH → NaCl + H2O.)

- "For the titration of H2SO4 and NaOH, acid and base has a 2:1 ratio, number of moles of base is twice as the number of moles of acid."
(H2SO4 is diprotic: H2SO4 + 2 NaOH → Na2SO4 + 2 H2O.)