Chemistry, asked by Kishan9379, 1 year ago

Neutralisation experiment hydrochloric acid and sodium hydroxide in simple way

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
0

HCl + Na(OH) -----》NaCl + H20

This is seen on adding HCl and NaOH.

Answered by Preeti9432
0

Answer:

NaOH (aq)+ HCl(aq)→ Nacl(aq{metal salt of chloride}) +H2O(l)

Explanation:

Acids react with alkalis to form salts. These are called neutralisation reactions. In each reaction, water is also formed:

Acid + alkali → salt + water

Sodium hydroxide is an alkali (a soluble base) and hydrochloric acid is an acid.

hence the OH- ions of sodium hydroxide combine with the H+ ions of hydrochloric acid to give H2O which is a neutral compound… thus the base and acid are neutralized.

Na(OH + H)Cl = H2O

this is how the substance neutralizes.

the equation is :

NaOH (aq)+ HCl(aq)→ Nacl(aq{metal salt of chloride}) +H2O(l)

Hope it helps!!!

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