Change set

Pick exam & year, then Go.

Question map
Not attempted Correct Incorrect Bookmarked
Loading…
Q90 (NDA-II/2009) Science & Technology › Basic Science (Physics, Chemistry, Biology) › Applied everyday chemistry Answer Verified

Consider the following statements : 1. Soap cannot be used in acidic water. 2. Ionic part of a soap is —COO~.Na+. 3. Soap dissolves in water faster than detergent. Which of the statements given above is/are correct?

Result
Your answer:  ·  Correct: A
Explanation

Statement 1 is correct because soaps are sodium or potassium salts of long-chain carboxylic acids that react in acidic environments to form insoluble free fatty acids, which precipitate and lose their cleansing ability [t1, t2]. Detergents, however, remain effective in acidic conditions [t1]. Statement 2 is correct as the ionic part of soap is the carboxylate group, typically represented as —COO⁻Na⁺ or —COO⁻K⁺ [c1, c3, t10]. Statement 3 is incorrect; detergents generally have higher solubility and better penetrating power than soaps, especially in cooler or hard water [t7]. While soaps form insoluble 'scum' with calcium and magnesium ions in hard water, detergents do not form such precipitates, making them more efficient cleansing agents [c2, t6]. Therefore, only statements 1 and 2 are correct.

Sources

  1. [1] Science , class X (NCERT 2025 ed.) > Chapter 4: Carbon and its Compounds > Activity 4.10 > p. 75
  2. [2] Science , class X (NCERT 2025 ed.) > Chapter 4: Carbon and its Compounds > CH COOH CH CH OH CH C C CH CH H O 3 3 2 3 2 3 2 Acid O (E - + - - - - - + thanoic acid) (Ethanol) (Ester) O > p. 73
  3. [3] Science , class X (NCERT 2025 ed.) > Chapter 4: Carbon and its Compounds > Activity 4.12 > p. 76
How others answered
Each bar shows the % of students who chose that option. Green bar = correct answer, blue outline = your choice.
Community Performance
Out of everyone who attempted this question.
89%
got it right
✓ Thank you! We'll review this.

SIMILAR QUESTIONS

5 Cross-Linked PYQs

UPSC repeats concepts across years. Login to see how this question connects to 5 others.

Login with Google