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NDA Acids, Bases & Salts

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This page covers NDA Acids, Bases & Salts with complete concept notes, 3 graded practice MCQs, key points and exam-specific tips. Free to study.

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Concept Notes

Acids, Bases & Salts— Rules & Concept

Core ConceptRead this first — the foundation of the topic

Acids, Bases & Salts form the backbone of chemistry in RRB Group D exams. This topic appears in 2-3 questions every year, making it absolutely essential. CORE CONCEPT:

Acids are substances that give H+ ions in water. Bases give OH- ions in water. Salts are formed when acids react with bases. Think of acids as sour (lemon), bases as bitter (soap), and salts as neutral (table salt).

Key RulesCore rules you must know cold
Common acids

HCl (hydrochloric), H2SO4 (sulfuric), HNO3 (nitric). Bases turn red litmus blue, have pH greater than 7, and feel slippery

Common bases

NaOH (sodium hydroxide), Ca(OH)2 (lime water), NH4OH (ammonium hydroxide).

Formula BlockMemorise — at least one formula appears in every paper
• pH + pOH = 14 (at 25°C)
• Neutralization: Acid + Base → Salt + Water
• pH = -log[H+]
• For strong acids: pH = -log(concentration)
• For strong bases: pOH = -log(concentration), then pH = 14 - pOH
Exam PatternsWhat examiners ask — read before attempting PYQs

RRB Group D consistently asks about pH values, neutralization reactions, and daily life applications. Common question types include identifying acids/bases from pH values, predicting salt formation, and recognizing indicators. Properties of common household acids and bases are heavily tested.

ShortcutsUse these to save 30–60 seconds per question
1

#1 - pH Memory: Remember 'ACIDIC = BELOW 7, BASIC = ABOVE 7'. For quick pH calculation of strong acids: pH ≈ -log(molarity). If 0.01 M HCl, pH =

2

If 0.001 M HCl, pH = 3.

Worked ExampleSolve this step-by-step before moving on
1
Step 1

HCl is strong acid, completely ionizes

2
Step 2

[H+] = 0.01 M = 10^-2 M

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Step 3

pH = -log[H+] = -log(10^-2)

4
Step 4

pH = -(-2) = 2 Answer: pH = 2 (strongly acidic) WORKED EXAMPLE 2: Question: What salt forms when NaOH reacts with HCl?

1
Step 1

Write the neutralization equation

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Step 2

NaOH + HCl → NaCl + H2O

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Step 3

Identify salt = NaCl (sodium chloride)

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Step 4

This is neutral salt (strong acid + strong base) Answer: Sodium chloride (common salt) SHORTCUT TRICK #2 - Salt Nature: Strong acid + Strong base = Neutral salt (pH = 7) Strong acid + Weak base = Acidic salt (pH < 7) Weak acid + Strong base = Basic salt (pH > 7) Remember: 'STRONG wins over WEAK' SHORTCUT TRICK #3 - Indicator Colors: Litmus: Red in acid, Blue in base Methyl Orange: Red in acid, Yellow in base Phenolphthalein: Colorless in acid, Pink in base Memory trick: 'RAP music' - Red Acid Pink base for phenolphthalein

Exam TrapsCommon mistakes students make — avoid these

#1: Students confuse pH and pOH values. Remember: pH measures H+ ions (acidity), pOH measures OH- ions (basicity). Lower pH = more acidic, higher pH = more basic.

Many students think pH 8 is acidic because 8 > 7, but it's actually basic. Always remember the scale: 0-6.9 acidic, 7 neutral, 7.1-14 basic. Daily life applications are crucial for RRB exams. Vinegar (acetic acid), lemon juice (citric acid), and battery acid (sulfuric acid) are common acids.

Soap (sodium stearate), toothpaste (contains bases), and antacids (magnesium hydroxide) are common bases. These real-world connections frequently appear in questions, making this topic both practical and testable.

Key Points to Remember

  • Acids give H+ ions in water, bases give OH- ions, salts form from acid-base neutralization
  • pH scale: 0-7 acidic, 7 neutral, 7-14 basic (pH + pOH = 14)
  • Formula shortcut: For strong acids, pH = -log(molarity)
  • Litmus paper: Red in acid, Blue in base (easy memory trick)
  • Strong acid + Strong base = Neutral salt with pH = 7
  • Common acids: HCl, H2SO4, HNO3; Common bases: NaOH, Ca(OH)2, NH4OH
  • Salt nature trick: Strong component wins over weak component
  • Phenolphthalein: Colorless in acid, Pink in base
  • Daily acids: vinegar, lemon juice, gastric juice; Daily bases: soap, toothpaste, antacids
  • Neutralization equation: Acid + Base → Salt + Water (most tested reaction)

Exam-Specific Tips

  • pH of pure water at 25°C is exactly 7.0
  • Hydrochloric acid (HCl) is present in human stomach with pH 1.5-2.0
  • Calcium hydroxide Ca(OH)2 is called lime water and turns milky with CO2
  • Sodium chloride (NaCl) is formed from HCl + NaOH neutralization
  • Litmus is extracted from lichens and is the most common natural indicator
  • Universal indicator shows pH range 1-14 with different colors for each pH value
  • Methyl orange changes color at pH 3.1-4.4 range
  • Phenolphthalein changes from colorless to pink at pH 8.2-10.0 range
Practice MCQs

Acids, Bases & Salts — Practice Questions

3graded MCQs · easy to hard · full solution & trap analysis

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Practice 1easy

When a few drops of phenolphthalein indicator are added to a solution, the solution turns pink. What can be concluded about the nature of the solution?

Practice 2medium

A student adds 10 mL of dilute hydrochloric acid (HCl) to 10 mL of sodium hydroxide solution (NaOH) in a test tube. The pH of the resulting solution is measured as 7. Which statement correctly explains this observation?

Practice 3hard

A student prepares three solutions and measures their pH values using a pH meter. Solution X has pH = 2, Solution Y has pH = 7, and Solution Z has pH = 12. Which statement correctly describes the nature and relative concentration of H⁺ ions in these solutions?

60-Second Revision — Acids, Bases & Salts

  • Remember: pH below 7 = acidic, pH above 7 = basic, pH = 7 neutral
  • Formula: pH + pOH = 14 for all aqueous solutions at 25°C
  • Shortcut: Strong acid pH = -log(concentration), strong base pOH = -log(concentration)
  • Trap: Don't confuse pH and pOH - pH measures acidity, pOH measures basicity
  • Key reaction: Acid + Base → Salt + Water (neutralization)
  • Indicators: Litmus red→blue, Methyl orange red→yellow, Phenolphthalein colorless→pink
  • Daily examples: Acids (vinegar, lemon), Bases (soap, antacids), Salts (table salt)
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