False
A measure for the acidity/basicity of a solution is the pH.
Concentration is the amount of a substance in a given volume or mass.
False-apex
false
Hydrogen
An acid increase the hydrogen ion concentration in a solution.
pH indicator
There are several types of titration techniques, including acid-base titration (determining the concentration of an acid or base), redox titration (determining the concentration of oxidizing or reducing agents), complexometric titration (determining the metal ion concentration using a complexing agent), and precipitation titration (determining the concentration of a dissolved substance by precipitating it).
The equivalence point represents a region where the amount of acid to base (or base to acid) concentration is equal. Before the equivalence point there is a greater amount of acid (or base, depending on the titration). After the titration there is a greater amount of base (or acid). This reverse in dominance results in a dramatic change in pH.
dilute
Is dilute considered as a colloid or a suspension
false
yes, the oxalic acid would be the standard acid by which the base is titrated and the concentration determined. if the oxalic acid is 'around' 1M, that could mean anything
It simply refers to the concentration of uric acid in the blood.
Determination of the concentration of a base by titration with acids or determination of the concentration of an acid by titration with bases. (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Acid-base_titration)
the H+ concentration and the OH- concentration
Acid and base when mixed in equal concentration neutralize each other.So if the water has both in equal concentration the water will not show the properties of the acid or the base.if any one i.e. acid or base is higher in concentration than the other the water will show its properties.
Hydrogen
The acid base volume ratio is call the titration. The formula is Macid + Vbase = Vacid + Mbase. Macid is concentration of the acid. Vbase is volume of the base. Vacid is the volume of the acid. Mbase is the concentration of the base.
When the concentration of the weak acid is the same as the concentration of the conjugate base, the pH will be equal to the pKa of the weak acid. This is because from the Henderson Hasselbalch eq:pH = pKa + log [acid]/[conj.base] and when [acid] = [conj.base], the log of 1 = 0 and pH = pKa.
The strength of an acid or base depends on its concentration. More the concentration of Hydrogen ions [H+] more acidic it is and more the concentration of Hydroxide ions [OH-] more basic it is.