Neutralization is a chemical reaction in which an acid and a base  interact with the formation of a salt to make a solution neutral. With  strong acids and bases the important reaction is the combination of  hydrogen ions with hydroxide ions to form water.
A salt is any compound which can be derived from the             neutralization of an acid and a base. The word "neutralization"             is used because the acid and base properties of H+             and OH- are destroyed or neutralized. In the reaction,             H+ and OH- combine to form HOH or H2O             or water molecules. A neutralization is a type of double replacement             reaction. A salt is the product of an acid-base reaction and             is a much broader term then common table salt as shown in the             first reaction.
The following are some examples of neutralization reactions             to form salts.
              a. HCl + NaOH --> NaCl + HOH
              b. H2SO4 + 2 NH4OH -->             (NH4)2SO4 + 2 HOH
              c. 2 NaOH + H2CO3 --> N2CO3             + 2 NaOHCarbon dioxide in the breath reacts first with the water to form carbonic acid:
CO2 + H2O --> H2CO3
              The carbonic acid then further reacts with the lime water             in the neutralization reaction. The phenolphthalein is pink in             the presence of base and turns colorless when all of the base             has been neutralized and there is a slight excess of the carbonic             acid.
More specifically, there are four combinations of strong and weak acids and bases:-  strong acid + strong base, e.g., HCl + NaOH --> NaCl + H2OWhen  strong acids and strong bases react, the products are salt and water.  The acid and base neutralize each other, so the solution will be neutral  (pH=7) and the ions that are formed will not reaction with the water.
 -  strong acid + weak base, e.g., HCl + NH3 ---> NH4ClThe  reaction between a strong acid and a weak base also produces a salt,  but water is not usually formed because weak bases tend not to be  hydroxides. In this case, the water solvent will react with the cation  of the salt to reform the weak base. For example:
HCl (aq) + NH3 (aq) <--> NH4+ (aq) + Cl- while
NH4- (aq) + H2O <--> NH3 (aq) + H3O+ (aq)
 -  weak acid + strong base, e.g., HClO + NaOH --> NaClO + H2OWhen  a weak acid reacts with a strong base the resulting solution will be  basic. The salt will be hydrolyzed to form the acid, together with the  formation of the hydroxide ion from the hydrolyzed water molecules.
 -  weak acid + weak base, e.g., HClO + NH3 <--> NH4ClOThe  pH of the solution formed from the reaction of a weak acid with a weak  base depends on the relative strengths of the reactants. For example, if  the acid HClO has a Ka of 3.4 x 10-8 and the base NH3 has a Kb = 1.6 x 10-5, then the aqueous solution of HClO and NH3 will be basic because the Ka of HClO is less than the Ka of NH3.
 
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