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🔬 Intro 🍋 Acids 🧴 Bases 🎨 Indicators ⚗️ Neutralization 🧂 Salts 🧪 Experiments 📊 Summary 🧠 MCQs ✍️ Short Q&A 📖 Long Q&A 🌟 Fun Facts
🧪 Class 7 · Science · Complete Notes

🧪 Acids, Bases & Salts

Indicators · pH Scale · Neutralization · Experiments · MCQs

ACID
BASE
🧂 Salt + 💧 Water
🔬 Introduction

Look around you! The lemon in your kitchen, the soap you wash your hands with, the salt on your dinner table -- they all belong to three important groups of chemicals that we encounter every single day.

In this chapter, we will learn about Acids, Bases, and Salts -- three categories of substances that play a vital role in our daily life, in our body, and in nature!

🍋 Acids

Substances that taste sour. Found in lemon, vinegar, curd, and even in your stomach!

🧴 Bases

Substances that taste bitter and feel soapy. Found in soap, baking soda, and antacids.

🧂 Salts

Formed when an acid reacts with a base. Common salt (NaCl) is the best-known example!

🔍 Why Study Acids, Bases & Salts?

🍲 In Food

Citric acid in lemon, acetic acid in vinegar (sirka), lactic acid in curd (dahi) -- acids make food tasty!

🩹 In Health

Antacids (Eno, Digene, Pudin Hara) neutralize excess stomach acid. Medicines use acid-base chemistry!

🌱 In Farming

Farmers test soil pH and add lime (base) or organic matter to make soil suitable for crops.

🛼 In Cleaning

Soaps and detergents are bases. Window cleaners contain ammonia (a base).

📚 Historical Note: The Irish chemist Robert Boyle (1627-1691) was the first to use litmus as an indicator to test acids and bases. He discovered that acids turn blue litmus red and bases turn red litmus blue!

📚 Key Vocabulary

Substance

Any matter that has a specific composition and properties (e.g., water, salt, acid).

Solution

A uniform mixture where one substance (solute) is dissolved in another (solvent), like salt in water.

Indicator

A substance that changes colour in the presence of an acid or base, helping us identify them.

Taste & Touch

Acids taste sour. Bases taste bitter and feel soapy/slippery. (Never taste chemicals in lab!)

💡 Remember: The word "acid" comes from the Latin word "acidus" meaning sour. The word "alkali" (another name for base) comes from Arabic "al-qali" meaning ashes of a plant!
🍋 Acids -- The Sour Substances

An acid is a substance that tastes sour in water solution and turns blue litmus paper red. Acids release hydrogen ions (H⁺) when dissolved in water.

🔴 Properties of Acids

🐼 Sour Taste

All acids taste sour. Lemon is sour because of citric acid. Curd is sour because of lactic acid.

🔴 Turn Blue Litmus Red

When blue litmus paper is dipped in an acid, it turns red. This is the key test for acids!

⚗️ React with Metals

Acids react with metals like zinc and iron to produce hydrogen gas (H₂) with a "pop" sound.

💥 React with Bases

Acids react with bases to form salt + water. This is called neutralization!

⚡ Conduct Electricity

Acid solutions conduct electricity because they contain ions (charged particles).

🔥 Corrosive

Strong acids like HCl and H₂SO₄ can burn skin and damage materials. Handle with care!

🍃 Natural Acids (Organic Acids)

These acids are found naturally in plants, animals, and food:

AcidFound In (Source)Taste/Use
🍋 Citric AcidLemon (nimbu), Orange (santra), AmlaSour taste in citrus fruits
🍎 Malic AcidApple (seb), PearTart taste in apples
🍇 Tartaric AcidGrapes (angur), Tamarind (imli)Sour taste; used in baking powder
🥛 Lactic AcidCurd (dahi), Yogurt, Sour milkMakes milk sour; also in muscles after exercise
🐝 Formic AcidAnt bite, Bee sting, Nettle leafCauses pain and itching on skin
🍅 Oxalic AcidTomato (tamatar), Spinach (palak)Slightly sour; used in cleaning
🧈 Acetic AcidVinegar (sirka)Sour taste; used in cooking & pickling
🤮 Hydrochloric Acid (HCl)Stomach (gastric juice)Helps digest food; kills bacteria
🍮 Ascorbic AcidAmla, Orange, GuavaVitamin C! Keeps us healthy

⚗️ Mineral Acids (Strong Acids)

These are man-made acids produced in laboratories and factories. They are very strong and dangerous!

HCl - Hydrochloric Acid

Used in cleaning, making medicines, and found in stomach as gastric juice.

H₂SO₄ - Sulphuric Acid

Called the "King of Chemicals" because it is used in almost every industry -- batteries, fertilizers, dyes!

HNO₃ - Nitric Acid

Used to make fertilizers, explosives (TNT), and in gold testing (Aqua Regia = HCl + HNO₃).

Metal + Acid → Salt + Hydrogen gas (H₂) ↑
Zn + 2HCl → ZnCl₂ + H₂ ↑ (Pop sound when tested with burning matchstick!)
🍋 Lemon Juice = Citric Acid!
🍋

Squeezing a lemon releases citric acid drops!

💡 Memory Trick (Natural Acids): Remember "CLOT FAM" -- Citric (lemon), Lactic (curd), Oxalic (tomato), Tartaric (imli), Formic (ant), Acetic (vinegar), Malic (apple)!
🧴 Bases -- The Bitter Substances

A base is a substance that tastes bitter, feels soapy or slippery to touch, and turns red litmus paper blue. Bases release hydroxide ions (OH⁻) when dissolved in water. A base that dissolves in water is called an alkali.

🔵 Properties of Bases

😖 Bitter Taste

Bases taste bitter. Think of the bitter taste of baking soda or the after-taste of some medicines.

🔵 Turn Red Litmus Blue

When red litmus paper is dipped in a base, it turns blue. This is the key test for bases!

🧼 Soapy/Slippery Feel

Bases feel soapy or slippery when rubbed between fingers (because they react with skin oils).

💥 React with Acids

Bases react with acids to form salt + water (neutralization reaction).

⚡ Conduct Electricity

Base solutions also conduct electricity because they contain ions.

🔥 Can Be Corrosive

Strong bases like NaOH (caustic soda) can burn skin. "Caustic" means burning!

🧴 Common Bases and Their Sources

Base (Chemical Name)Common NameFound In / Use
NaOH (Sodium Hydroxide)Caustic SodaMaking soap, drain cleaner
KOH (Potassium Hydroxide)Caustic PotashMaking liquid soap, batteries
NaHCO₃ (Sodium Bicarbonate)Baking Soda (Meetha Soda)Cooking, baking, antacid
Ca(OH)₂ (Calcium Hydroxide)Slaked Lime (Chuna)Whitewashing, lime water, paan
Mg(OH)₂ (Magnesium Hydroxide)Milk of MagnesiaAntacid (Digene, Eno)
NH₃ (Ammonia) solutionAmmonia / Liquid NH₃Window cleaner, fertilizer
Na₂CO₃ (Sodium Carbonate)Washing Soda (Dhulai Soda)Washing clothes, making glass
📚 Important Difference: All alkalis are bases, but not all bases are alkalis! An alkali is a base that dissolves in water. For example, NaOH dissolves in water (alkali), but Cu(OH)₂ does not dissolve (base but not alkali).
💡 Everyday Base Examples:
🧴 Soap -- soapy feel, slippery
🥞 Toothpaste -- slightly bitter, basic to fight tooth decay acid
💉 Antacids (Eno, Digene, Pudin Hara) -- basic to neutralize stomach acid
🎨 Lime water (Chuna Paani) -- Ca(OH)₂ used in paan and whitewashing
🎨 Indicators -- The Colour Detectives

We know acids are sour and bases are bitter, but we should NEVER taste chemicals to identify them -- that's dangerous! Instead, scientists use special substances called indicators that change colour to tell us if something is an acid or a base.

🍃 Natural Indicators

These indicators are obtained from plants and natural sources:

🔴 Acid Test

Blue litmus → turns RED in acid

🔵 Base Test

Red litmus → turns BLUE in base

🪨 Litmus

Extracted from lichen (a plant). Most commonly used indicator!
In acid: Blue → Red
In base: Red → Blue
Neutral: No change

🍳 Turmeric (Haldi)

Indian kitchen indicator!
In acid: Yellow (no change)
In base: Yellow → Red/Brown
That's why turmeric stain turns red when you wash with soap!

🌼 China Rose (Gudhal)

Petals of hibiscus flower!
In acid: Dark pink / Magenta
In base: Green
Neutral: Light pink

🥭 Red Cabbage

Juice changes colour beautifully!
In acid: Red / Pink
In base: Green / Yellow
Neutral: Purple / Violet

🧪 Synthetic (Man-made) Indicators

Phenolphthalein

In acid: Colourless
In base: Pink / Magenta
Very useful in lab experiments!

Methyl Orange

In acid: Red / Pink
In base: Yellow
Used in titration experiments.

🎨 Indicator Colour Quick View

🪨 Litmus Paper
In Acid
In Base
🍳 Turmeric
In Acid
In Base
🌼 China Rose
In Acid
In Base
Phenolphthalein
In Acid
In Base

📈 The pH Scale (0-14)

The pH scale is a number scale from 0 to 14 that measures how acidic or basic a substance is. pH stands for "potential of Hydrogen".

🌈 The pH Scale
⚠️ STRONG ACID NEUTRAL STRONG BASE ⚠️
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
🧪Battery Acid
pH 0
🍋Lemon
pH 2
🧈Vinegar
pH 3
🍓Curd
pH 4.5
💧Pure Water
pH 7
🬀Blood
pH 7.4
🧴Baking Soda
pH 8.5
🧴Soap
pH 12
⚠️NaOH
pH 14
pH 0-6 = ACIDIC
pH 7 = NEUTRAL
pH 8-14 = BASIC
💡 Easy Way to Remember pH:
pH less than 7 = Acid (the LOWER the number, the STRONGER the acid)
pH equal to 7 = Neutral (pure water)
pH more than 7 = Base (the HIGHER the number, the STRONGER the base)
📚 Did you know? Our blood has a pH of about 7.4 (slightly basic). Our stomach has a pH of about 1.5-2 (very acidic)! Even small changes in blood pH can be life-threatening.
⚗️ Neutralization Reaction

When an acid reacts with a base, they cancel out each other's properties to form a salt and water. This reaction is called neutralization. Heat is also released (exothermic reaction)!

Acid + Base → Salt + Water + Heat
⚗️ Watch Neutralization Happen!
Acid (HCl)
+
Base (NaOH)
🧂 NaCl
Salt
+
💧 H₂O
Water
+
🔥 Heat
Energy

🧪 Examples of Neutralization

HCl + NaOH → NaCl + H₂O
(Hydrochloric acid + Sodium hydroxide → Common salt + Water)
H₂SO₄ + 2NaOH → Na₂SO₄ + 2H₂O
(Sulphuric acid + Sodium hydroxide → Sodium sulphate + Water)
HNO₃ + KOH → KNO₃ + H₂O
(Nitric acid + Potassium hydroxide → Potassium nitrate + Water)

🌏 Neutralization in Daily Life

🐝 Ant/Bee Sting Remedy

Ant and bee stings inject formic acid into skin. Applying baking soda (NaHCO₃) -- a base -- neutralizes the acid and reduces pain!

🐜
🧴✨

Formic acid (ant sting) + Baking soda (base) → Salt + Water = Relief!

🐝 Ant/Bee Sting

Problem: Formic acid (acidic)

Remedy: Apply baking soda (NaHCO₃) paste -- a base neutralizes the acid!

🌿 Nettle Plant Sting

Problem: Injects methanoic acid

Remedy: Rub with dock leaf (contains base) or apply baking soda!

😣 Acidity/Heartburn

Problem: Excess HCl in stomach

Remedy: Take antacid -- Eno, Digene, Pudin Hara, Milk of Magnesia (Mg(OH)₂) neutralizes acid!

🦷 Tooth Decay

Problem: Bacteria in mouth produce acid that decays teeth

Remedy: Brush teeth with toothpaste (basic) to neutralize acid!

🌲 Soil Treatment

Acidic soil: Add quick lime/slaked lime (CaO/Ca(OH)₂) -- a base

Basic soil: Add organic matter/compost -- slightly acidic

🏭 Factory Waste

Problem: Factory waste is often acidic

Remedy: Treated with lime (base) before releasing into rivers to protect aquatic life!

🤮 How Antacids Work

Your stomach produces HCl to digest food. When too much acid is produced, you feel acidity/heartburn. An antacid tablet (base) drops in and neutralizes the extra acid!

💊

Mg(OH)₂ (antacid) + 2HCl (stomach acid) → MgCl₂ + 2H₂O

💡 Exam Tip: Remember, neutralization is always: Acid + Base → Salt + Water + Heat. The type of salt depends on which acid and which base react!
🧂 Salts

A salt is a compound formed when the hydrogen (H⁺) of an acid is replaced by a metal or ammonium ion. Salts are produced during neutralization reactions.

🔴 Acid
HCl
+
🔵 Base
NaOH
🧂 Salt
NaCl
+
💧 Water
H₂O

🧂 Common Salt (NaCl) -- Sodium Chloride

The most well-known salt is common salt (NaCl) that we use in food every day! It is formed from hydrochloric acid (HCl) and sodium hydroxide (NaOH).

🥞 Sources

Sea water, rock salt deposits, salt lakes. India's Sambhar Lake in Rajasthan is a famous salt source!

🍳 Uses

Cooking, food preservation (pickling, drying), making soap, glass, and chemicals like NaOH and Na₂CO₃.

🩹 In Body

Essential for nerve function, muscle movement, and water balance. Too little or too much salt is harmful!

📈 Other Common Salts in Daily Life

Salt (Formula)Common NameHow FormedUse
NaClCommon Salt / Table SaltHCl + NaOHCooking, preservation
NaHCO₃Baking Soda (Meetha Soda)Contains Na⁺ and HCO₃⁻Baking, antacid, fire extinguisher
Na₂CO₃Washing Soda (Dhulai Soda)From NaCl by Solvay processCleaning, softening water, making glass
CaSO₄Plaster of Paris (POP)From gypsum (heating)Making casts, statues, moulds
KNO₃Saltpetre / Potassium NitrateHNO₃ + KOHFertilizer, fireworks, gunpowder
📚 Neutral, Acidic, or Basic Salts? Not all salts are neutral! A salt of a strong acid + weak base is acidic (e.g., NH₄Cl). A salt of a weak acid + strong base is basic (e.g., Na₂CO₃). A salt of a strong acid + strong base is neutral (e.g., NaCl).
🧪 Activities & Experiments

🧪 Activity 4.1: Testing with Litmus Paper

📖 NCERT Textbook Activity

Blue Litmus → Red
🧪 ACID
Red Litmus → Blue
🧴 BASE
No Change on Either
💧 NEUTRAL

🎯 Aim: Test the acidic, basic, or neutral nature of substances using litmus paper.

📦 Materials: Red & blue litmus paper, dropper, test solutions — lemon juice, tap water, detergent solution, aerated drink, soap solution, shampoo, salt solution, sugar solution, vinegar, baking soda solution, milk of magnesia, washing soda solution, lime water.

👣 Steps:

  1. Arrange all test solutions in small containers and label them.
  2. Place a strip of blue litmus paper and a strip of red litmus paper on a white tile.
  3. Using a dropper, put one drop of the first solution on each litmus strip.
  4. Record the colour change (or no change) for both strips. Repeat for every solution.
  5. Classify each solution: blue litmus turns red = Acid; red litmus turns blue = Base; no change on either = Neutral.
👀 Observation: Acids turn blue litmus red. Bases turn red litmus blue. Neutral substances (water, salt solution, sugar solution) cause no change on either litmus paper.

🧪 Activity 4.2: Turmeric as Natural Indicator

📖 NCERT Textbook Activity

Turmeric Paper
(Yellow)
Soap Solution
(Base)
Turns Red/Brown
in Base!

🎯 Aim: Make turmeric paper and test solutions with it.

📦 Materials: Turmeric powder, water, blotting paper (or filter paper), test solutions (soap, lemon juice, baking soda, vinegar, tap water, etc.).

👣 Steps:

  1. Make a turmeric paste by mixing turmeric powder with a little water.
  2. Spread the paste evenly on strips of blotting paper. Let them dry completely.
  3. Place a drop of soap solution on a turmeric strip — observe the colour change.
  4. Test other solutions: lemon juice, baking soda solution, vinegar, tap water, shampoo.
  5. Record which solutions change the turmeric paper colour and which do not.
👀 Observation: Basic solutions (soap, baking soda, washing soda) turn turmeric paper red/brown. Acidic solutions and neutral solutions cause no change — the paper stays yellow. That is why a turmeric stain on white cloth turns red when washed with soap!

🧪 Activity 4.3: China Rose (Gudhal) Indicator

📖 NCERT Textbook Activity

China Rose
Solution
Dark Pink
Acid
Pinkish
Neutral
Green
Base

🎯 Aim: Prepare China rose (gudhal) indicator and test substances.

📦 Materials: China rose (hibiscus) petals, warm water, beaker, test solutions (dilute HCl, NaOH, vinegar, baking soda, tap water, etc.).

👣 Steps:

  1. Collect fresh China rose petals and soak them in warm water for some time.
  2. The water turns pink — this is your China rose indicator solution.
  3. Take three test tubes. Add 5 drops of indicator to each.
  4. Add an acidic solution to tube 1, a neutral solution to tube 2, and a basic solution to tube 3.
  5. Observe the colour in each test tube and record results.
👀 Observation: Acids turn China rose indicator dark pink / magenta. Bases turn it green. Neutral solutions show no significant change (stays pinkish).

🧪 Activity 4.4: Testing with Three Indicators Together

📖 NCERT Textbook Activity

Solution Red Litmus Blue Litmus Turmeric Paper China Rose
Dil. HCl No change → Red No change Dark pink
Dil. H₂SO₄ No change → Red No change Dark pink
Dil. HNO₃ No change → Red No change Dark pink
Acetic Acid No change → Red No change Dark pink
NaOH → Blue No change → Red/Brown Green
Ca(OH)₂ → Blue No change → Red/Brown Green
NH₄OH → Blue No change → Red/Brown Green
Cells fade in one by one — compare all 3 indicators!

🎯 Aim: Compare the results of litmus, turmeric, and China rose indicators on laboratory acids and bases.

📦 Materials: Dilute HCl, H₂SO₄, HNO₃, acetic acid, NaOH, NH₄OH, Ca(OH)₂, red & blue litmus paper, turmeric paper, China rose solution.

👣 Steps:

  1. Prepare a small sample of each acid and base in labelled containers.
  2. Test each with red litmus, blue litmus, turmeric paper, and China rose indicator.
  3. Record the colour change (or no change) in a comparison table.
  4. Compare which indicator works best for identifying acids vs. bases.
👀 Observation: All acids turn blue litmus red and China rose dark pink, but cause no change on red litmus or turmeric. All bases turn red litmus blue, turmeric red/brown, and China rose green. Each indicator has its own characteristic colour change!

🧪 Activity 4.5: Neutralisation Reaction

📖 NCERT Textbook Activity

Colourless → 💧 NaOH drops → Pink → 💧 HCl drops → Colourless → repeat
Test tube cycles: acid (colourless) ↔ base (pink) with heat released

🎯 Aim: Demonstrate neutralisation using phenolphthalein indicator.

📦 Materials: Test tube, dilute HCl, phenolphthalein indicator, NaOH solution, dropper.

👣 Steps:

  1. Take a test tube and add a small amount of dilute HCl.
  2. Add 2–3 drops of phenolphthalein indicator. The solution remains colourless (acid).
  3. Now add NaOH solution drop by drop. The solution turns pink (base is now in excess).
  4. Add a few more drops of HCl — the pink colour disappears (acid neutralises the base).
  5. Add NaOH again — pink returns! You can repeat this cycle. Touch the bottom of the test tube — it feels warm.
👀 Observation: Phenolphthalein is colourless in acid and pink in base. The neutralisation reaction produces salt + water + heat.
Acid + Base → Salt + Water + Heat

🌟 Bonus: Secret Message Activity

⭐ Extended / Fun Activity

HELLO
Invisible baking soda writing revealed by beetroot juice!

🎯 Aim: Write a secret message using a base and reveal it with a natural indicator.

📦 Materials: Baking soda, water, white paper, thin paintbrush or cotton bud, beetroot.

👣 Steps:

  1. Dissolve baking soda in a small amount of water.
  2. Dip a paintbrush in the solution and write a message on white paper. Let it dry — the writing becomes invisible!
  3. Grate or crush beetroot and squeeze out the juice.
  4. Rub beetroot juice across the paper — the message appears in red because baking soda (base) changes the beetroot indicator colour!
👀 Observation: Baking soda is a base. Beetroot juice acts as a natural indicator and turns red/dark pink where the base is present, revealing the hidden message.

🌟 Bonus: Red Cabbage Juice — The pH Rainbow

⭐ Extended / Fun Activity

pH 2 pH 4 pH 7 pH 8 pH 10 pH 12
Red Cabbage juice shows a different colour at every pH!

🎯 Aim: Use red cabbage juice as a universal-style indicator that shows different colours at different pH values.

📦 Materials: Red cabbage, water, saucepan, several test tubes, test solutions at various pH (lemon juice, vinegar, tap water, baking soda, soap, lime water).

👣 Steps:

  1. Chop red cabbage and boil it in water for 10–15 minutes. Strain out the purple juice.
  2. Pour equal amounts of cabbage juice into 6 test tubes.
  3. Add a different test solution to each tube: strong acid, mild acid, neutral, mild base, strong base, very strong base.
  4. Observe the rainbow of colours: red → pink → purple → blue → green → yellow.
👀 Observation: Red cabbage juice contains a pigment called anthocyanin. It is red in strong acids, pink in mild acids, purple/blue in neutral, blue-green in mild bases, green in strong bases, and yellow in very strong bases — a natural pH rainbow!
📊 Summary Tables

🔴 Common Acids and Their Sources

Acid NameFormulaNatural SourceType
Citric AcidC₆H₈O₇Lemon, Orange, AmlaOrganic
Acetic AcidCH₃COOHVinegar (Sirka)Organic
Lactic AcidC₃H₆O₃Curd (Dahi), Sour MilkOrganic
Tartaric AcidC₄H₆O₆Tamarind (Imli), GrapesOrganic
Formic AcidHCOOHAnt sting, Bee stingOrganic
Oxalic AcidC₂H₂O₄Tomato, SpinachOrganic
Malic AcidC₄H₆O₅AppleOrganic
Hydrochloric AcidHClStomach (gastric juice)Mineral
Sulphuric AcidH₂SO₄ManufacturedMineral
Nitric AcidHNO₃ManufacturedMineral

🔵 Common Bases and Their Sources

Base NameFormulaCommon NameUse
Sodium HydroxideNaOHCaustic SodaSoap making, drain cleaner
Potassium HydroxideKOHCaustic PotashLiquid soap, batteries
Calcium HydroxideCa(OH)₂Slaked Lime (Chuna)Whitewashing, lime water
Magnesium HydroxideMg(OH)₂Milk of MagnesiaAntacid
Sodium BicarbonateNaHCO₃Baking SodaCooking, antacid
Sodium CarbonateNa₂CO₃Washing SodaCleaning, glass making
Ammonium HydroxideNH₄OHAmmonia SolutionWindow cleaner

🎨 Indicator Colour Chart

IndicatorColour in AcidColour in BaseColour when Neutral
Blue Litmus RED No change (Blue) No change (Blue)
Red Litmus No change (Red) BLUE No change (Red)
Turmeric (Haldi) No change (Yellow) RED / BROWN Yellow
China Rose (Gudhal) Dark Pink GREEN Light Pink
Phenolphthalein Colourless PINK Colourless
Methyl Orange RED / PINK YELLOW Orange
Red Cabbage RED GREEN Purple

⚖️ Acids vs Bases Comparison

Property🔴 Acids🔵 Bases
TasteSourBitter
TouchSticky / waterySoapy / slippery
Litmus testBlue litmus → RedRed litmus → Blue
Turmeric testNo change (yellow)Turns red/brown
pH range0 to less than 7More than 7 to 14
ContainsH⁺ ionsOH⁻ ions
React with metalsYes, produces H₂ gasSome react (e.g., NaOH + Al)
ExamplesHCl, H₂SO₄, lemon, vinegarNaOH, Ca(OH)₂, soap, baking soda
🧠 Multiple Choice Questions (MCQs)

Click on any option -- the correct one will be highlighted. Click "Show Answer" for explanation.

  • 1. Which of the following is acidic in nature?
    • (a) Soap solution
    • (b) Lemon juice
    • (c) Baking soda solution
    • (d) Lime water
    Answer: (b) Lemon juice -- contains citric acid (pH ~2).
  • 2. Blue litmus paper turns red when dipped in:
    • (a) Base
    • (b) Pure water
    • (c) Acid
    • (d) Salt solution
    Answer: (c) Acid -- acids turn blue litmus red.
  • 3. The reaction between an acid and a base is called:
    • (a) Decomposition
    • (b) Combination
    • (c) Neutralization
    • (d) Oxidation
    Answer: (c) Neutralization -- Acid + Base = Salt + Water.
  • 4. The pH of pure water is:
    • (a) 0
    • (b) 5
    • (c) 7
    • (d) 14
    Answer: (c) 7 -- pure water is neutral.
  • 5. Which acid is present in vinegar (sirka)?
    • (a) Citric acid
    • (b) Acetic acid
    • (c) Lactic acid
    • (d) Formic acid
    Answer: (b) Acetic acid -- vinegar is a dilute solution of acetic acid (CH₃COOH).
  • 6. Turmeric (haldi) indicator turns red in:
    • (a) Acid
    • (b) Base
    • (c) Neutral solution
    • (d) All of the above
    Answer: (b) Base -- turmeric stays yellow in acid but turns red/brown in base.
  • 7. An ant sting can be treated by applying:
    • (a) Vinegar
    • (b) Lemon juice
    • (c) Baking soda paste
    • (d) Common salt
    Answer: (c) Baking soda paste -- being a base, it neutralizes the formic acid of the ant sting.
  • 8. Which of the following is called the "King of Chemicals"?
    • (a) HCl
    • (b) H₂SO₄
    • (c) HNO₃
    • (d) NaOH
    Answer: (b) H₂SO₄ -- Sulphuric acid is called King of Chemicals due to its widespread industrial use.
  • 9. Which substance is used to treat excess acidity in the stomach?
    • (a) More HCl
    • (b) Citric acid
    • (c) Antacid (Milk of Magnesia)
    • (d) Vinegar
    Answer: (c) Antacid (Milk of Magnesia) -- Mg(OH)₂ neutralizes excess stomach acid.
  • 10. Litmus is obtained from:
    • (a) Rose plant
    • (b) Lichen
    • (c) Turmeric plant
    • (d) Hibiscus plant
    Answer: (b) Lichen -- litmus indicator is extracted from lichen, a plant-like organism.
  • 11. What is formed when an acid reacts with a metal?
    • (a) Salt + Water
    • (b) Salt + Hydrogen gas
    • (c) Base + Water
    • (d) Only water
    Answer: (b) Salt + Hydrogen gas -- e.g., Zn + 2HCl = ZnCl₂ + H₂
  • 12. Which of the following is a natural indicator?
    • (a) Phenolphthalein
    • (b) Methyl orange
    • (c) Turmeric (Haldi)
    • (d) Sodium hydroxide
    Answer: (c) Turmeric (Haldi) -- a natural indicator from the turmeric plant.
  • 13. The acid present in curd (dahi) is:
    • (a) Acetic acid
    • (b) Citric acid
    • (c) Lactic acid
    • (d) Tartaric acid
    Answer: (c) Lactic acid -- bacteria convert milk sugar (lactose) into lactic acid during curdling.
  • 14. Phenolphthalein is colourless in acid and turns _____ in base.
    • (a) Yellow
    • (b) Red
    • (c) Pink
    • (d) Green
    Answer: (c) Pink -- phenolphthalein turns pink/magenta in basic solutions.
  • 15. To treat acidic soil, a farmer should add:
    • (a) More acid
    • (b) Quick lime or slaked lime
    • (c) Common salt
    • (d) Vinegar
    Answer: (b) Quick lime (CaO) or slaked lime (Ca(OH)₂) -- these are bases that neutralize the acidic soil.

✍️ Short Answer Questions
  • Q1. Define acid with two examples.
    Ans: An acid is a substance that tastes sour, turns blue litmus red, and releases H⁺ ions in water solution. Examples: Citric acid (in lemon), Hydrochloric acid (HCl in stomach).
  • Q2. Define base with two examples.
    Ans: A base is a substance that tastes bitter, feels soapy, turns red litmus blue, and releases OH⁻ ions in water. Examples: Sodium hydroxide (NaOH), Calcium hydroxide Ca(OH)₂ (lime water).
  • Q3. What is a neutralization reaction? Give the general equation.
    Ans: A neutralization reaction is a chemical reaction in which an acid reacts with a base to form salt and water. General equation: Acid + Base → Salt + Water + Heat.
  • Q4. What is an indicator? Name two natural indicators.
    Ans: An indicator is a substance that changes colour in the presence of an acid or base, helping us identify them without tasting. Two natural indicators: Litmus (from lichen) and Turmeric / Haldi.
  • Q5. Why should we not taste chemicals to test if they are acid or base?
    Ans: Many acids and bases are highly corrosive and can cause severe burns to the mouth, throat, and stomach. Some are also poisonous. We should always use indicators for safe testing.
  • Q6. What happens when turmeric stain is washed with soap?
    Ans: The turmeric stain turns red/brown when washed with soap because soap is a base, and turmeric is a natural indicator that changes from yellow to red in a basic solution.
  • Q7. How does an antacid help in relieving stomach acidity?
    Ans: An antacid contains a mild base like Mg(OH)₂ (milk of magnesia) or NaHCO₃ (baking soda). When taken, it neutralizes the excess HCl (hydrochloric acid) in the stomach, giving relief from acidity.
  • Q8. What is the pH scale? What does pH 7 represent?
    Ans: The pH scale is a scale from 0 to 14 that measures how acidic or basic a substance is. pH 7 represents a neutral substance (like pure water). Below 7 is acidic, above 7 is basic.
  • Q9. Why is H₂SO₄ called the "King of Chemicals"?
    Ans: Sulphuric acid (H₂SO₄) is called the "King of Chemicals" because it is the most widely used chemical in industry -- in making fertilizers, dyes, paints, detergents, explosives, batteries, and many other products.
  • Q10. Name the acid present in: (a) lemon (b) curd (c) vinegar (d) ant sting.
    Ans: (a) Citric acid in lemon, (b) Lactic acid in curd (dahi), (c) Acetic acid in vinegar (sirka), (d) Formic acid in ant sting.
  • Q11. How does a farmer treat acidic soil?
    Ans: A farmer adds quick lime (CaO) or slaked lime (Ca(OH)₂) to acidic soil. Being bases, they neutralize the excess acid in the soil, making it suitable for growing crops.
  • Q12. What is the difference between an acid and a base?
    Ans: Acids taste sour, turn blue litmus red, release H⁺ ions, and have pH less than 7. Bases taste bitter, feel soapy, turn red litmus blue, release OH⁻ ions, and have pH more than 7.
  • Q13. Give two examples of salts used in daily life.
    Ans: (1) NaCl (Sodium chloride / Common salt) -- used in cooking and food preservation. (2) NaHCO₃ (Sodium bicarbonate / Baking soda) -- used in cooking, baking, and as an antacid.
  • Q14. What is the role of HCl in our stomach?
    Ans: Hydrochloric acid (HCl) in the stomach: (1) helps digest food by breaking down proteins, (2) kills harmful bacteria that enter with food, and (3) creates an acidic environment for digestive enzymes to work.
  • Q15. Why does the colour of China rose (gudhal) indicator change differently in acid and base?
    Ans: China rose extract contains natural pigments (anthocyanins) that are sensitive to pH changes. In acidic solutions, these pigments appear dark pink/magenta. In basic solutions, they change to green. This colour change helps identify acids and bases.
📖 Long Answer, Fill in the Blanks & True/False

📖 Long Answer Questions

Q1. Explain the process of neutralization with the help of an example. Mention any three real-life applications.
Ans: Neutralization is a chemical reaction in which an acid reacts with a base to form salt, water, and heat. For example: HCl + NaOH → NaCl + H₂O (Hydrochloric acid + Sodium hydroxide gives Common salt + Water).

Three real-life applications:
(1) Treating ant/bee sting: The sting injects formic acid. Applying baking soda (a base) neutralizes the acid and reduces pain.
(2) Antacids for acidity: When the stomach produces excess HCl, antacids like Eno or Digene (containing Mg(OH)₂) neutralize the acid and provide relief.
(3) Treating acidic soil: Farmers add slaked lime Ca(OH)₂ (a base) to acidic soil to neutralize it, making it suitable for farming.
Q2. Describe the pH scale. How is it useful in everyday life?
Ans: The pH scale is a measurement scale from 0 to 14 that indicates how acidic or basic a substance is. The letters "pH" stand for "potential of Hydrogen."

Key points:
- pH 0-6: Acidic (lower number = stronger acid)
- pH 7: Neutral (pure water)
- pH 8-14: Basic (higher number = stronger base)

Everyday uses:
(1) Agriculture: Farmers test soil pH to decide what crops to grow and whether to add lime or compost.
(2) Health: Our blood pH (7.4) must stay constant. Stomach pH (~2) is maintained for digestion. Doctors monitor pH for disease diagnosis.
(3) Water treatment: Drinking water pH is maintained at 6.5-8.5 for safety.
(4) Food industry: Food pH is checked for safety and preservation.
Q3. Explain the properties of acids and bases with examples.
Ans: Properties of Acids: (1) Taste sour (lemon, vinegar). (2) Turn blue litmus red. (3) Release H⁺ ions in water. (4) React with metals to produce hydrogen gas: Zn + 2HCl → ZnCl₂ + H₂. (5) React with bases (neutralization). (6) Conduct electricity in solution. Examples: HCl, H₂SO₄, citric acid.

Properties of Bases: (1) Taste bitter (baking soda). (2) Feel soapy/slippery (soap). (3) Turn red litmus blue. (4) Release OH⁻ ions in water. (5) React with acids (neutralization). (6) Conduct electricity in solution. Examples: NaOH, Ca(OH)₂, NaHCO₃.
Q4. What are indicators? Describe litmus, turmeric, and china rose as indicators with their colour changes.
Ans: An indicator is a substance that shows different colours in acidic and basic solutions, helping us identify them.

1. Litmus: Extracted from lichen. Blue litmus turns RED in acid. Red litmus turns BLUE in base. No change in neutral solution.
2. Turmeric (Haldi): Stays yellow in acid (no change). Turns RED/BROWN in base. This is why haldi stains turn red when washed with soap.
3. China Rose (Gudhal): Turns dark pink/magenta in acid. Turns GREEN in base. Remains light pink in neutral solution.

These natural indicators are safe, easily available, and useful for quick acid-base testing.
Q5. How are salts formed? Give three examples of salts with their uses.
Ans: Salts are formed by the neutralization reaction of an acid with a base. When an acid reacts with a base, the hydrogen (H⁺) of the acid is replaced by a metal ion from the base, forming a salt and water.

General equation: Acid + Base → Salt + Water

Three examples:
(1) NaCl (Common Salt): HCl + NaOH → NaCl + H₂O. Used in cooking, food preservation, and making chemicals.
(2) NaHCO₃ (Baking Soda): A salt of sodium. Used in cooking (making bread fluffy), as an antacid, and in fire extinguishers.
(3) CaSO₄ (Calcium Sulphate / Plaster of Paris): Used for making plaster casts for broken bones, moulds, statues, and toys.

✏️ Fill in the Blanks

Click on each question to reveal the answer.

  • 1. Acids taste __________ and bases taste __________.
    Ans: Acids taste sour and bases taste bitter.
  • 2. The acid present in ant sting is __________ acid.
    Ans: Formic acid.
  • 3. Litmus is a natural indicator obtained from __________.
    Ans: Lichen.
  • 4. The pH of pure water is __________.
    Ans: 7.
  • 5. When acid reacts with a base, __________ and __________ are formed.
    Ans: Salt and water are formed.

✔️ True or False

Click on each statement to reveal the answer.

  • 1. Bases turn blue litmus paper red.
    FALSE. Bases turn red litmus paper blue. It is acids that turn blue litmus red.
  • 2. Turmeric is a natural indicator.
    TRUE. Turmeric (haldi) is a natural indicator that turns red/brown in base.
  • 3. The pH value of acids is always greater than 7.
    FALSE. Acids have pH value less than 7. Bases have pH greater than 7.
  • 4. Neutralization is an exothermic reaction (releases heat).
    TRUE. Neutralization reactions always release heat energy.
  • 5. Common salt (NaCl) is formed by the reaction of HCl and NaOH.
    TRUE. HCl + NaOH → NaCl + H₂O is a classic neutralization reaction.

🌟 Fun Facts -- Did You Know?

🥛 Why Does Milk Turn Sour?

Bacteria called Lactobacillus convert the sugar (lactose) in milk into lactic acid. As more lactic acid forms, the milk becomes sour and thick -- that's how curd (dahi) is made!

💊 How Do Antacids Work?

Antacids contain bases like Mg(OH)₂ or NaHCO₃. When you take an Eno or Digene, it neutralizes the excess HCl in your stomach. The fizzing in Eno is CO₂ gas released during the reaction!

💇 Why Is Hair Conditioner Acidic?

Shampoo is basic (pH 8-9) which opens hair cuticles. Conditioner is slightly acidic (pH 4-5) which closes the cuticles back, making hair smooth and shiny! It's acid-base chemistry on your head!

⚠️ Never Mix Cleaning Products!

Mixing bleach (basic) with toilet cleaner (acidic) can produce toxic chlorine gas! Different cleaners should never be mixed together -- even if both seem harmless alone.

🤮 Why Is Our Stomach Acidic?

Our stomach has a pH of about 1.5-2 -- as acidic as battery acid! The inner lining produces a thick mucus layer that protects the stomach walls from being digested by its own acid!

🌧️ How Does Acid Rain Form?

Factories and vehicles release SO₂ and NO₂ gases. These dissolve in rainwater to form sulphuric acid and nitric acid, making the rain acidic (pH below 5.6). Acid rain damages buildings, statues, and kills fish in lakes!

💡 Bonus Fact: The famous Taj Mahal in Agra is getting damaged by acid rain! The marble (CaCO₃) reacts with sulphuric acid in rain: CaCO₃ + H₂SO₄ → CaSO₄ + H₂O + CO₂. This is called "Marble Cancer"!

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