In Chemistry, What Is Neutralization?
Neutralization refers to the process of forming salt and water after the acid and alkali meet.
Neutralization
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- Chinese name
- Neutralization
- English name
- neutralization
- definition
- The specific antibody binds to the corresponding antigenic determinant, so that the toxin loses its toxicity, the virus loses its ability to infect sensitive cells, and the toxic enzyme loses its enzymatic activity, preventing the virus from entering the host cell.
- Applied discipline
- Immunology (level 1 discipline), Introduction (level 2 discipline), Adaptive Immunization (level 3 discipline)
- Neutralization refers to the process of forming salt and water after the acid and alkali meet.
- The above content was published by the National Science and Technology Terminology Examination Committee.
- For example: NaOH + HCl-NaCl + H2O is the function of H * ions and OH ~ ions to form water. Geologically, it often includes the role of positively charged substances combined with negatively charged substances to precipitate. For example, in the estuary area of rivers and seas, the particles carried by the river water are positively charged, and when they meet the oppositely charged ions in the seawater, the neutralization surface precipitates. [1]