Acids Bases and Salts
Manocha Academy・1 minute read
Various everyday items like tomato sauce, orange, lemon, soap, and vinegar contain acids, bases, or salts, each with distinct characteristics and purposes. These substances exhibit differences in taste, neutralization, solubility, and can be identified through indicator tests.
Insights
- Everyday items like tomato sauce, oranges, vinegar, and soaps contain acids, bases, or salts, showcasing the practical application of these chemical concepts outside the classroom.
- Varied properties such as taste, solubility, and indicator tests distinguish acids, bases, and salts, highlighting the diverse ways these substances can be identified and differentiated in real-world scenarios.
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Recent questions
What common household item contains oxalic acid?
Tomato sauce
What are soaps and toothpaste classified as?
Bases
What is the chemical composition of salt?
Sodium chloride
What are the differences between acids, bases, and salts?
Taste, neutralization, identification, solubility, indicator tests
What is the acid found in oranges and lemons?
Citric acid
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Summary
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Everyday Items: Acids, Bases, and Salts
- Acids, bases, and salts are not limited to textbooks or labs but are present in everyday items.
- Items on the table include tomato sauce, chalk, liquid soap, soap bar, orange, lemon, toothpaste, salt, sugar, and vinegar.
- Tomato sauce contains oxalic acid and another acid listed in the ingredients.
- Oranges and lemons contain citric acid, while vinegar contains acetic acid.
- Soaps and toothpaste are bases, with bar soap made from sodium hydroxide and liquid soap from potassium hydroxide.
- Salt is represented by sodium chloride and chalk by calcium carbonate.
- Sugar does not fall into the categories of acid, base, or salt.
- Differences between acids, bases, and salts include taste, neutralization, identification, solubility in water, and indicator tests.




