Item pH Value Acid rain 5.2 Ammonia water 11.6 Apple juice 2.9 - 3.3 Baking soda 8.0 Borax 9.2 Distilled water 7.0 Drinking water 6.5 - 8 Eggs 7.6 - 8 Grapes 3.5 - 4.5 Grapefruit juice 3 - 3.3 Human blood 7.35 - 7.45 Human saliva 6.3 - 6.6 Hydrochloric acid 0.1 Lemon juice 2.3 Lime 1.8 - 2 Limewater 12.4 Milk of magnesia 10.5 Normal rain 5.7 Orange Juice 3 - 4 Sea water 7.36 - 8.21 Soda lye 14.0 Sour milk 4.3 - 4.5 Stomach juice 1 - 3 Sulfuric acid 0.3 Tomato & Tomato Juice 4.2 Vinegar 2.4 - 3.4 White bread 5 - 6
First, It would depend on the household products since the pH (acid level) of some products may be higher then other products. so after you pick your products, you take a strip of pH paper and depending on the color, you'd put it on a scale from 1 to 5 which is the pH scale when your finding the acidity of a product. so if you took out the paper and color was really dark it would probably be a 5, in the middle it would be around 3 or 4, then when its very light or no change at all it'd probably be 1. In conclusion, that is how you find the acidity of various household products.
pH value - Household item
1.0 - battery acid
1.8 - 2.0 - limes
2.2. - 2.4 lemon juice
2.2 Vinegar (acetic acid)
2.8 - 3.4 - fruit jellies
2.9 - 3.3 - apple juice, cola
3.0 - 3.5 - strawberries
3.7 - orange juice
4.0 - 4.5 - tomatoes
5.6 - unpolluted rain
5.8 - 6.4 - peas
6.0 - 6.5 - corn
6.1 - 6.4 - butter
6.4 - cow's milk
6.5 - 7.5 - human saliva
6.5 - 7.0 - maple syrup
7.0 - distilled water
7.3 - 7.5 - human blood
7.6 - 8.0 - egg whites
8.3 - baking soda
9.2 - borax
10.5 - milk of magnesia
11.0 - laundry ammonia
12.0 - lime water
13.0 - lye
14.0 -
Hope this helps you.
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Any solution - aliquid with a solid or gas dissolved in it - can have a pH.
Soap is the most common There's also bleach and baking soda
Household ammonia has a pH of 11.5 to 12.5
Find some pH indicator strips. Dip a strip in your item and the color will tell you the approximate pH. These strips can be found at laboratory stockrooms in schools or online.
There are many different household cleaners, and their pH's vary widely. Some toilet cleaners are pH 1 -2, washing up liquid is about 7 to 8 and oven cleaner is 11 -13. It can also vary with the brand.
chips
Any solution - aliquid with a solid or gas dissolved in it - can have a pH.
Compare it to other common items found in a household.
7-7.6 ???? I don't know where this answer came from, but straight out of the bottle household bleach has a ph of about 12.6! This comes from several references and my own measurement with a Hanna meter.
Soap is the most common There's also bleach and baking soda
Household ammonia has a pH of 11.5 to 12.5
Find some pH indicator strips. Dip a strip in your item and the color will tell you the approximate pH. These strips can be found at laboratory stockrooms in schools or online.
There are many different household cleaners, and their pH's vary widely. Some toilet cleaners are pH 1 -2, washing up liquid is about 7 to 8 and oven cleaner is 11 -13. It can also vary with the brand.
Household ammonia has 10 times higher H+ concentration
Items and products are purchased by households. These items need to have some value to the household or they will not purchase them, no matter the cost.
Any household items contain technetium.
Any household items contain chlorophyll.