What Are Acids, Bases and Salts in O Level Chemistry?
The acids bases and salts O level topic covers three related families of chemical compounds and how they interact with each other.- Acids — substances that produce hydrogen ions (H⁺) in aqueous solution. Examples: hydrochloric acid (HCl), sulfuric acid (H₂SO₄), nitric acid (HNO₃)
- Bases — substances that neutralise acids. Bases that dissolve in water are called alkalis and produce hydroxide ions (OH⁻). Examples: sodium hydroxide (NaOH), ammonia solution (NH₃)
- Salts — ionic compounds formed when an acid reacts with a base. The hydrogen in the acid is replaced by a metal ion or ammonium ion. Examples: sodium chloride (NaCl), copper sulfate (CuSO₄)
5 Facts About Acids Bases and Salts Every O Level Student Must Know
Fact 1: The pH Scale Measures Acidity and Alkalinity
The pH scale runs from 0 to 14 and tells you how acidic or alkaline a solution is:- pH 0–6 = acidic (lower pH = stronger acid)
- pH 7 = neutral (e.g. pure water)
- pH 8–14 = alkaline (higher pH = stronger alkali)
Fact 2: Strong Acids and Weak Acids Are Not the Same as Concentrated and Dilute
This is one of the most common points of confusion in the acids bases and salts O level topic — and examiners know it.- Strong acids (e.g. HCl, H₂SO₄, HNO₃) fully ionise in water — all molecules break up into ions
- Weak acids (e.g. ethanoic acid, carbonic acid) only partially ionise in water
- Concentrated refers to the amount of acid dissolved — a high number of molecules per unit volume
- Dilute refers to a low concentration — fewer molecules per unit volume
Fact 3: Neutralisation Always Produces a Salt and Water
The core reaction in the acids bases and salts O level topic is neutralisation. When an acid reacts with a base, it always produces a salt and water: Acid + Base → Salt + Water The name of the salt produced depends on which acid and which base react:| Acid Used | Salt Family Produced | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Hydrochloric acid (HCl) | Chloride | Sodium chloride (NaCl) |
| Sulfuric acid (H₂SO₄) | Sulfate | Copper sulfate (CuSO₄) |
| Nitric acid (HNO₃) | Nitrate | Potassium nitrate (KNO₃) |
Fact 4: There Are Four Main Methods of Salt Preparation
Salt preparation is one of the most practical and heavily tested sections. O Level students need to know which method to use depending on whether the salt is soluble or insoluble:- Titration — used to prepare soluble salts from an acid and an alkali (e.g. NaCl from HCl and NaOH)
- Excess solid method — used to prepare soluble salts from an acid and a metal, metal oxide, or metal carbonate
- Precipitation — used to prepare insoluble salts by mixing two soluble solutions
- Direct combination — used in specific cases like iron sulfide formation
Fact 5: Indicators Tell You Whether a Solution Is Acidic or Alkaline
Indicators are substances that change colour depending on the pH of a solution. At O Level, you need to know these key indicators:| Indicator | Colour in Acid | Colour in Neutral | Colour in Alkali |
|---|---|---|---|
| Litmus | Red | Purple | Blue |
| Methyl orange | Red | Orange | Yellow |
| Phenolphthalein | Colourless | Colourless | Pink |
| Universal indicator | Red/Orange/Yellow | Green | Blue/Violet |
How to Study Acids Bases and Salts for O Level Chemistry
Master the Naming System First
Before tackling reactions, make sure you can confidently name any salt given the acid and base. Drill this until it is automatic: HCl → chloride, H₂SO₄ → sulfate, HNO₃ → nitrate. This single skill unlocks a large number of exam marks.Write Out Equations by Hand
Write neutralisation reactions repeatedly — word equations first, then symbol equations, then full ionic equations. If you can write a balanced ionic equation from memory, you are operating at distinction level.Understand Salt Preparation as a Decision Tree
When a question asks how to prepare a salt, ask yourself: is the salt soluble or insoluble? If soluble, what are the starting materials? Walking through this logic — rather than memorising steps — means you can handle any variation the examiner uses. For more strategies on approaching O Level Chemistry questions, read our guide on top tips to score well in O Level Chemistry. If you find yourself confused about why Pure Chemistry feels harder than expected, our post on why Pure Chemistry suddenly feels harder in Sec 4 breaks down exactly what changes and what you can do about it. Our guides on organic chemistry and the mole concept tie in closely with acids, bases and salts at the higher levels of Paper 2.Get Help With Acids, Bases and Salts O Level Chemistry
At IONX Labs, O Level Chemistry classes cover acids, bases and salts in depth — building from first principles so students understand the logic behind every reaction. Classes are capped at 8 students. Find out more about our O Level Pure Chemistry tuition programme.
WhatsApp to Book → Our Chemistry ProgrammeFurther Reading
Frequently Asked Questions
Strong and weak refer to the degree of ionisation — a strong acid (e.g. HCl) fully ionises in water, while a weak acid (e.g. ethanoic acid) only partially ionises. Concentrated and dilute refer to the amount of acid dissolved per unit volume — a high concentration means more molecules of acid in the same volume of water. A concentrated weak acid and a dilute strong acid are both possible. These are completely independent properties and examiners test this distinction directly.
The name of the salt comes from two parts: the metal (or ammonium) from the base, and the anion from the acid. Hydrochloric acid produces chloride salts (e.g. sodium chloride), sulfuric acid produces sulfate salts (e.g. copper sulfate), and nitric acid produces nitrate salts (e.g. potassium nitrate). The formula of the salt must balance the charges of the metal cation and the acid anion.
Insoluble salts are prepared by precipitation — mixing two soluble solutions that each contain one of the ions needed. For example, to make lead sulfate (PbSO₄), mix lead nitrate solution (source of Pb²⁺) with sodium sulfate solution (source of SO₄²⁻). The insoluble salt immediately precipitates out of solution. Filter to collect the precipitate, wash with distilled water, and dry. This method cannot be used for soluble salts because the product would dissolve instead of precipitating.
For a strong acid/strong alkali titration, use phenolphthalein or methyl orange — both give a sharp colour change at the endpoint. Phenolphthalein changes from colourless (acid) to pink (alkali), while methyl orange changes from red (acid) to yellow (alkali). Litmus is not suitable for titration because it gives a gradual colour change over a wide pH range, making the endpoint difficult to identify precisely. Universal indicator is also unsuitable for the same reason.
Acid + Base → Salt + Water. This applies for all neutralisation reactions at O Level. The ionic equation for neutralisation is always: H⁺(aq) + OH⁻(aq) → H₂O(l). This ionic equation is the same regardless of which acid and which base react — it represents the core event of neutralisation, which is the combination of hydrogen ions and hydroxide ions to form water.