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🔬 Science ⏱ 3 min read

What Happens When an Acid and a Base Mix Together

When acids and bases mix, they react together in a process called neutralisation, creating new substances and often releasing energy.

Age 10–13
KS4 Chemistry Ages 11-16
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Acids and Bases Are Opposites

Imagine if you had two puzzle pieces that fit together perfectly—that's what acids and bases are like. They're chemical opposites. Acids are substances that taste sour and can sting (like lemon juice or vinegar). Bases are the opposite—they're slippery and bitter (like baking soda or soap). When you bring these two opposites together, something amazing happens.

The Neutralisation Reaction

When an acid mixes with a base, they don't just sit there. They react together in a process called neutralisation. This is a chemical reaction—a change where atoms rearrange to create completely new substances. The most important thing to know is that acids and bases cancel each other out, creating neutral substances.

Think of it like a playground argument: when an angry friend (the acid) meets a calm friend (the base), they talk it out and both become peaceful (neutral). The argument disappears, and something new—friendship and peace—takes its place.

What Gets Created?

When an acid and base mix, they produce two main things: salt and water. Yes, salt—the stuff you put on chips! It's not created just from salt shakers; it's created from chemical reactions too. The type of salt depends on which acid and base you mix together. For example, mixing hydrochloric acid with sodium hydroxide (a base) creates sodium chloride (table salt) and water.

Energy and Heat

Here's something cool: neutralisation reactions often release energy as heat. Sometimes the mixture gets noticeably warm. This is why chemists are careful when mixing strong acids and bases—the reaction can be intense!

Think of it like mixing hot and cold water: when opposite temperatures meet, the energy balances out, and you feel warmth in the middle.

Why Does This Matter?

Understanding neutralisation is crucial in real life. Doctors use it to treat acid reflux (heartburn) with antacids—which are bases that neutralise excess stomach acid. Farmers use it to balance soil pH. Even your body constantly balances acids and bases to keep you healthy. This simple reaction is happening everywhere around you!

Test yourself 🧠

This quiz is calibrated for KS4 Chemistry.