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Acetic acid is used in the synthesis of phenyl mercuric acetate by combining mercuric acetate with benzene to create an antifungal used in agriculture. It is both flammable and extremely explosive.
Glucose are crystalline, colorless solids that are poorly soluble in both ethanol and methanol. However they are highly soluble in acetic acid and water.
Water, potassium and acetate ions. If you're adding equal amounts of both, the final solution will have a pH greater than 7.
The result of a reaction with acetic acid and CH3NH2 is a product known as N-methylethanamide. This only happens if a high enough temperature is used, otherwise a reaction may not occur at all.
Both being two polar compounds, aniline is highly soluble in acetic acid.
Acetic acid is used in the synthesis of phenyl mercuric acetate by combining mercuric acetate with benzene to create an antifungal used in agriculture. It is both flammable and extremely explosive.
The common acidic buffer contains Acetic acid and Sodium acetate and common basic buffer contains Ammonium hydroxide and Ammonium chloride, the solvent in both cases is water.
oxidation-reductionWhat type of a reaction occurs when a sodium hydroxide solution is mixed with an acetic acid solution?The answer above is wrong. The correct answer is acid-base neutralization
Sort of. Sometimes a chemical reaction happens in two or more steps and can feature reactions of different types. One that includes both double replacement and decomposition reactions is that of a carbonate or bicarbonate with an acid such as vinegar and baking soda (acetic acid and sodium bicarbonate). In this reaction the acetic acid and sodium bicarbonate first undergo a double displacement reaction forming sodium acetate and carbonic acid. The carbonic acid, which is unstable, then decomposes into water and carbon dioxide. CH3CO2H + NaHCO3 --> NaCH3CO2 + H2CO3 followed by H2CO3 --> CO2 + H2O gives the overall reaction of CH3CO2H + NaHCO3--> NaCH3CO2 + CO2 + H2O
Glucose are crystalline, colorless solids that are poorly soluble in both ethanol and methanol. However they are highly soluble in acetic acid and water.
Yes, it contains both. The sodium forms an ionic bond with the one oxygen with a single bond (not double) with the carbon, becoming the cation (positive charge). This oxygen and all other atoms in the acetate form covalent bonds.
Water, potassium and acetate ions. If you're adding equal amounts of both, the final solution will have a pH greater than 7.
An acetotartrate is a salt of both tartaric acid and acetic acid.
Both being two polar compounds, aniline is highly soluble in acetic acid.
The result of a reaction with acetic acid and CH3NH2 is a product known as N-methylethanamide. This only happens if a high enough temperature is used, otherwise a reaction may not occur at all.
Formic acid gives positive result in both tollen's test and fehlings test. but acetic acid doesnot.
They are very close to each other, they both dissociate completely in solution, as they both contain the sodium cation. 36g of NaCl can dissolve in 100g of H_2_0 and 50.4g of NaCH_3_COO can dissolve in 100g of H_2_O So Sodium acetate is slightly more soluable because it also forms a weak acid with the acetate ion, creating a buffer solution, where as sodium and chlorine do not.