Being the both compounds are acids they do not each other, but they do dissolve and mix them in each other. It may be declared that dissolving is also some sort of reaction as it causes a difference in intermolecular forces.
No reaction; you can obtain only an acid mixture.
No, hydrochloric acid is stronger than citric acid.
Silver does not react with hydrochloric acid.
No, lemon juice is not hydrochloric. Citrus fruits are a source of citric acid, not hydrochloric acid.
Pumice does not react with hydrochloric acid.
No, hydrochloric acid does not need air to react with iron. When hydrochloric acid reacts with iron, you will notice the reaction because of the bubbling.
No, hydrochloric acid is stronger than citric acid.
Tin can not only react with citric acid, it can react with any acid.
Silver does not react with hydrochloric acid.
Gold react with aqua regia not with hydrochloric acid.
No, lemon juice is not hydrochloric. Citrus fruits are a source of citric acid, not hydrochloric acid.
Pumice does not react with hydrochloric acid.
First off. You should NOT be drinking hydrochloric acid. Second, hydrochloric acid added to another acid is just that, more acid.
Citric acid will react to baking soda creating sodium citrate and carbon dioxide when mixed with water. Citric acid is also an additive in foods.
No, citric acid is stable in normal light.
No,Hydrochloric acid contains water while carbolic acid does not so they do not mix with each other and do not react.
Sulfur does not react with hydrochloric acid.
Hydrochloric Acid Sulphuric Acid Nitric Acid Phosphoric Acid Citric Acid