Sodium hydroxide in a pure form is a solid, so you cannot dissolve anything in it. Normally, NaOH is used as an aqueous solution. But salicylic acid dissolves in water, so the presence of NaOH in the water is irrelevant to the solubility of salicylic acid. It is the water, not the NaOH, that dissolves the salicylic acid.
Sodium salicylate does react with HCl:
C7H5NaO3 + HCl = C7H6O3 + NaCl
Cacl2 + 2naoh goes into 2nacl and ca( oh)2
salicylic acid react with NaHCO3 and evolvoes CO2 which is an indication of acid.
You get aspirin.
5 mL of NaOH
Alcohols react with NaOH, as ethanol forms sodium ethoxide with NaOH.
A mixture of NaOH and NaHCO3 is incompatible because they share a cation. They both have Na+, so only the HCO3- and OH- will react. This leaves the products H2CO3 and NaOH.
HCl (hydrochloric acid) and NaOH (sodium hydroxide) will react to NaCl (sodium chloride) and water.
Sodium hydroxide does not react with hydrogen gas.
Yes. Sodium hydroxide will react with carbon dioxide to form sodium bicarbonate. NaOH + CO2 --> NaHCO3
5 mL of NaOH
Alcohols react with NaOH, as ethanol forms sodium ethoxide with NaOH.
Sodium Hydroxide - NaOH Ammonia - NH3 Sodium Bicarbonate- NaHCO3 By Ruwayda
NaHCO3 + CaCO3 = CO2 + CaCO3 + NaOH
Any reaction occur.
It doesn't need balancing - it's already balanced. NaHCO3 + NaOH → Na2CO3 + H2O
A mixture of NaOH and NaHCO3 is incompatible because they share a cation. They both have Na+, so only the HCO3- and OH- will react. This leaves the products H2CO3 and NaOH.
HCl (hydrochloric acid) and NaOH (sodium hydroxide) will react to NaCl (sodium chloride) and water.
NaOH + CO2--------------- NaHCO3 sodium bicarbonate aka Baking Soda
Sodium react with water:2 Na + 2 H2O = 2 NaOH + H2and2 NaOH + CO2 = Na2CO3 + H2O
Sodium will react with water to produce sodium hydroxide (NaOH) and water.