CHANGING COLOURS
How different paper indicators react with acids and alkali
THE PH INSPECTOR
Since the 1300s, we’ve been using litmus paper to gauge the ‘potential of hydrogen’, or pH level, of solutions. As a chemical indicator, litmus is designed to change colour when exposed to either acidic, alkaline or neutral solutions. It does this by reacting to the presence of two different ions: acids hold positively charged hydrogen ions, whereas alkali solutions hold negatively charged hydroxide ions. When a solution is neutral, the positively and negatively charged ions balance each other out.