Chemistry, asked by educationharisankar, 8 months ago

What happens when the concentration of H+ ions increases in a solution?​

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
10

Explanation:

pH: Acid-Base Concentration. As the concentration of hydrogen ions in a solution increase, the more acidic the solution becomes. As the level of hydroxide ions increases the more basic, or alkaline, the solution becomes. ... Thus, as the hydrogen ion concentration increases hydroxide ion concentration falls, and vice versa ...

Answered by ÚɢʟʏÐᴜᴄᴋʟɪɴɢ1
9

hope it's helpful ☺

Answer:

Increasing the hydrogen ion concentration above pH 5.0 causes a slow increase in the rate of destruction of pepsin. 3. Decreasing the hydrogen ion concentration below pH 5.0 causes a very rapid increase in the rate of destruction of the enzyme.

Similar questions