Chemistry, asked by vnk0148, 9 months ago

answer fast explain neutralisation

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
2

Explanation:

Neutralization is a process when acids and bases react to form salt and water. In a reaction to water, neutralization results in excess of hydrogen or hydroxide ions present in the solution. The pH of the neutralized solution depends on the strength of acid or base involved in it

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Answered by rohitsharma941478
1

When an acid solution and a base solution are mixed in suitable amounts, both the acidic nature of the acid and the basic nature of the base are destroyed. The resulting solution is neither acidic nor basic, it becomes neutral. This process is called Neutralisation.

When an acid solution and a base solution are mixed in suitable amounts, both the acidic nature of the acid and the basic nature of the base are destroyed. The resulting solution is neither acidic nor basic, it becomes neutral. This process is called Neutralisation.Please follow me and i will follow you back

When an acid solution and a base solution are mixed in suitable amounts, both the acidic nature of the acid and the basic nature of the base are destroyed. The resulting solution is neither acidic nor basic, it becomes neutral. This process is called Neutralisation.Please follow me and i will follow you backPlease mark me as the brainliest answer

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