Science, asked by anujakaushik073, 6 months ago

describe the neutralisation reaction with the help of an example...... help me ....​

Answers

Answered by sun1615
1

Answer:

A neutralization reaction can be defined as a chemical reaction in which an acid and base react together to form a salt and water as products. For example, when sodium hydroxide (NaOH) is added to hydrochloric acid (HCl), sodium chloride (NaCl) and water (H2O) are obtained.

Answered by pahelikachakroborty
1

Answer:

Neutralization is a type of chemical reaction in which a strong acid and strong base react with each other to form water and salt. Bee stings are acidic in nature, which is why a household remedy for a bee sting is baking soda or sodium bicarbonate, which is a basic substance. ...

Example:

Here are some ways neutralisation is used:

Farmers use lime (calcium oxide) to neutralise acid soils.

Your stomach contains hydrochloric acid, and too much of this causes indigestion. Antacid tablets contain bases such as magnesium hydroxide and magnesium carbonate to neutralise the extra acid.

Bee stings are acidic.

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