acids form hydrogen ions in water. bases form hydroxide ions (OH with a negative one charge) in water. CuO, which is copper II oxide, will form neither. salt is the common name for sodium chloride, NaCl. in chemistry, a salt is any ionic compound, made from a metal cation and a non-metal anion. CuO is a salt, but not one to eat.
Cupric chloride is a salt.
Cupric chloride solution is acidic.
Copper II oxide is neither acid nor base.
acid base
Anthony J. Suero
its a base.
No.
Strong
An acid base neutralization is not a substance as stated before but a reaction between acid molecules (or the protons from it) and a base compound (or basic ion in it). The products formed are normally a salt and water.Example:HCl + NaOH --> NaCl + H2O
[OH-] > [H+] means it's a strong base.
it should be an acid
Ammonia Nitrate NH4NO3 is a highly water-soluble salt
No it is not. It is an acid.
It's a simple acid-base reaction, your acid being your 2HCl and your base being CuO. Acid-base reactions form water, leaving behind a salt (CuCl2).
No. Copper II chloride is a salt.
Yes i believe that this is when u break up CuCl2 in H2O then you will end up with Cu(OH)2 and HCL so basically, after you balance the equation you end up with CuCl2+H2O------>Cu(OH)2+2HCl there are 3 rules you should know 1) salt of strong acid + strong base = neutral solution 2) salt of strong base + weak acid = basic solution 3) salt of strong acid + weak base = acidic solution since Cu(OH)2 is a weak base and HCL is strong acid we have the rule number 3 so its acidic
when an acid and a base combine, salt and water are formed. This process of reaction of an acid and base is called neutralisation.
Yes. An acid-base reaction forms a salt and water. acid+ + base− = salt + water
I'm assuming you mean a salt neutralising an acid or base- This can not actually happen, because a salt is already 'Neutralised' An acid can neutralise a base, and a base neutralise an acid, but when Base+Acid reacts, a salt is formed. Adding a salt to a acid or base solution will only make it salty.
acid+ base= salt + water
Acid + base salt + water
In a neutralisation reaction, an acid and a base will react to form a salt and water. This salt will be either acidic, basic or neutral depending upon the pH of the reactions. General rules:weak acid + strong base → basic salt + waterstrong acid + weak base → acidic salt + waterstrong acid + strong base → neutral salt + waterweak acid + weak base → neutral salt + water
NO!!!! Remember the general acid reaction equations. Acid + Base = Salt +Water Acid +Alkali = Salt + Water Acid +Metal = Salt + Hydrogen Acid + Carbonate = Salt + Water + Carbon Dioxide. NB An Alkali is a soluble Base.
guys the conclusion of acid base and salt is a salt only..... good luck guys...........
An Acid is neutralised by a Base , Alkali or Carboinate. Remember the general equations. Acid + Alkali = Salt + Water Acid + Base = Salt + Water Acid + Carbonate = Salt + Water + Carbon dioxide. NB An Alkali is a soluble Base.