Neutralisation
hydrochloric acid (HCI) symbol
H⁺ + Cl⁻ (same number of hydrogen ions as chloride ions)
sodium hydroxide (NaOH) symbol
Na⁺ + OH⁻ (contains sodium ions and hydroxide ions)
amines
a base found in fish which makes it smell (adding lemon neutralises amines)
neutralisation
a reaction in which an acid and a base cancel each other out
neutralisation equation
acid + base > salt + water
to neutralise an acid
add a base
to neutralise a base
add an acid
formation of water
all acids contain hydrogen ions / all soluble bases form hydroxide ions - so when an acid and a base neutralises each other water is formed
ant bites
ant injects formic acid - add a weak base (e.g. baking soda to neutralise the formic acid)
salts
different acids make different salts
neutralisation equation example
hydrochloric acid + calcium hydroxide > calcium chloride + water
hydrochloric acid + sodium hydroxide
when two solutions mix , the four ions also mix - the ions can combine (hydrogen ions (+) can combine with chloride (-) or hydroxide (-) → form a molecule of water (H₂O) which is neutral