Na2CO3 + Ca
No, calcium carbonate (CaCO3) is the calcium salt of carbonic acid (H2CO3). If a compound has the name of a metal in it (sodium, calcium, copper, etc) it is generally not an acid but a salt. A salt is formed when a metal ion or other positive ion takes the place of hydrogen in an acid.
no reaction
it is ionic ofcoarse .. as ionic is metal (sodium) and a non metal (carbonate) bonding together
the product will be co2 and an active metal ore NaBa.
sodium
Na2CO3 + Ca
Na(3)Co(2)+Ca
Na(3)Co(2)+Ca
No, calcium carbonate (CaCO3) is the calcium salt of carbonic acid (H2CO3). If a compound has the name of a metal in it (sodium, calcium, copper, etc) it is generally not an acid but a salt. A salt is formed when a metal ion or other positive ion takes the place of hydrogen in an acid.
No, it is not. Calcium is a metal but calcium carbonate is not.
metal ions and carbonate ions, CO32-.Fro example:-sodium carbonate Na2CO3, 2Na+ CO32-calcium carbonate, CaCO3, Ca2+ CO32-
Calcium is a metal
no reaction
Since it is a double displacement and the products of the reaction would be sodium nitrate and calcium carbonate, the precipitate would be calcium carbonate. This is because this reaction is a solubility based reaction, and sodium nitrate is a soluble compound (every metal is soluble in nitrate, and sodium dissolves in almost everything too). Whereas calcium carbonate is insoluble, and therefore will remain solid and form the precipitate.
Na2CO3 + Ca
Simply just calcium carbonate, iron, magnesium, sodium and other metal ions.
Calcium