Science, asked by excellent57, 10 months ago

which substances are produced in a neutralization process

Answers

Answered by mahipanchal5467
3

Answer:

Typically, water (

H

2

O

) is always a byproduct of an acid-base reaction.

Explanation:

The answer to this actually depends on how you define an acid and a base. Under the classic Arrhenius theory, an acid is defined as a substance that provides  

H

+

ions in solution, and a base is defined as a substance that provides  

OH

ions in solution.

A good example of a reaction whose outcome would be well-predicted by the Arrhenius theory would be the reaction of hydrochloric acid and sodium hydroxide.

HCl + NaOH

NaCl + H

2

O

Let's take a closer look at what goes on here. Firstly, as an acid is defined as a substance that provides  

H

+

ions, we will predict that an  

HCl

molecule, in solution, will dissociate into an  

H

+

ion, and a  

Cl

ion.

HCl

H

+

+ Cl

Likewise, since we have defined a base as a substance that will provide hydroxide ions, we will predict that a  

NaOH

molecule will dissociate into a  

Na

+

ion, and an  

OH

ion.

NaOH

Na

+

+ OH

Chloride ions will have a stronger attraction to sodium ions than to the hydrogen ions, so they will ionically bond, forming sodium chloride. Similarly, hydrogen ions and hydroxide ions will combine to form water.

HCl + NaOH

NaCl + H

2

O

Interestingly, under this definition of acids/bases, water is just about always formed as a byproduct, no matter which particular acid/base we're looking at. This is because at some point, we have hydrogen ions combining with hydroxide ions, which forms water.

However, in the real world we sometimes have compounds acting as bases even though they don't dissociate into hydroxide ions. In this situation we define a base simply as a proton acceptor and an acid as a proton donor, which is the premise of Brønsted-Lowry acid-base theory.

Thus under Brønsted-Lowry theory we sometimes have reactions where water is not a byproduct. An example could be the reaction of ammonia and hydrogen chloride gas to form ammonium chloride:

NH

3

+ HCl

NH

4

Cl

So, to sum it all up, under Arrhenius theory water is always a byproduct of an acid-base reaction, but this is not necessarily true if you expand your definitions a bit.


excellent57: but its a litttle big can't you make it smaller
mahipanchal5467: i wil try
mahipanchal5467: *will*
Answered by tanuja200746
0

Answer:

c.Neutralization reaction: A neutralization reaction is a reaction when an acid and a base reacts to form water and a salt. It involves the combination of H+ ions and OH- ions to generate water.

The neutralization of a strong acid and strong base has a pH equal to 7. That means salts are neutral in nature.

The neutralization of a strong acid and weak base will have a pH of less than 7. That means salts are acidic in nature.

The neutralization of a strong base neutralizes a weak acid will be greater than 7. That means salts are basic in nature.

Explanation:

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