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pH |
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pH, range of numbers expressing the relative acidity or alkalinity of a solution. In general, pH values range from 0 to 14. The pH of a neutral solution, i.e., one which is neither acidic nor alkaline, is 7. Acidic solutions have pH values below 7; alkaline, or basic, solutions have pH values above 7. A pH value provides a measure of the hydrogen ion concentration of a solution. In pure water the concentration of hydrogen ions is equal to 0.0000001, or 10−7, moles per liter. (A mole is the amount of a substance, expressed in grams, that is equal to the molecular weight, or formula weight, of the substance.) When an acid is added to pure water, the hydrogen ion concentration increases above this level. When an alkaline substance, or base, is added to pure water, the hydrogen ion concentration decreases below this level. Once the concentration is determined, the pH value is found by taking the exponent used in expressing this concentration and reversing its sign. This is expressed as pH=−log10 [H+]. For example, if the hydrogen ion concentration of a solution is 10−4, or 0.0001, moles per liter, the pH is 4. See indicators, acid-base indicators, acid-base, organic compounds that, in aqueous solution, exhibit color changes indicative of the acidity or basicity of the solution. Common indicators include p-nitrophenol, which is colorless from pH 1 to 5 and yellow from p ..... Click the link for more information. . pHQuantitative measure of the strength of the acidity or alkalinity (see acid, base) of a solution. It is defined as the negative common logarithm of the concentration of hydrogen ions [H+] in moles/litre: pH = −log10 [H+]. The letters of its name are derived from the absolute value of the power (p) of the hydrogen ion concentration (H). The product of the concentrations in water of H+ and OH− (the hydroxide ion) is always about 10−14. The strongest acid solution has about 1 mole/litre of H+ (and about 10−14 of OH−), for a pH of 1. The strongest basic solution has about 10−14 moles/litre of H+ (and about 1 of OH−), for a pH of 14. A neutral solution has about 10−7 moles/litre of both H+ and OH−, for a pH of 7. The pH value, measured by a pH meter, titration, or indicator (e.g., litmus) strips, helps inform chemists of the nature, composition, or extent of reaction of substances, biologists of the composition and environment of organisms or their parts or fluids, physicians of the functioning of bodily systems, and agronomists of the suitability of soils for crops and any treatments needed. The pH is now defined in electrochemical terms (see electrochemistry). pH potential of hydrogen; a measure of the acidity or alkalinity of a solution equal to the common logarithm of the reciprocal of the concentration of hydrogen ions in moles per cubic decimetre of solution. Pure water has a pH of 7, acid solutions have a pH less than 7, and alkaline solutions a pH greater than 7 pH [pē′āch] (chemistry) A term used to describe the hydrogen-ion activity of a system; it is equal to -logaH+; hereaH+is the activity of the hydrogen ion; in dilute solution, activity is essentially equal to concentration and pH is defined as -log10[H+], where H+is hydrogen-ion concentration in moles per liter; a solution of pH 0 to 7 is acid, pH of 7 is neutral, pH over 7 to 14 is alkaline. pH(S) (analytical chemistry)
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| This is a celebration of research to reality and realizing the potential of hydrogen as a genuine alternative fuel," said Mikel Oglesby, SunLine General Manager. As this refueler will be one of the first in South Korea, KOGAS-Tech will play a major role in demonstrating the potential of hydrogen technologies," said Pierre Rivard, President and CEO, Hydrogenics Corporation. The President's budget recognizes both the potential of hydrogen and fuel cells, and the challenges we still must overcome. |
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