Any number of chemical moieties could react with alkanes to produce new compounds in a substitution reaction. For example, hydrohalic acids (HCl, HBr, HI) could react with an alkane to produce a haloalkane. Here, the halogen atom would replace one of the hydrogen atoms in the alkane. (HCl + ethane --> chloroethane) (HBr + propane --> bromopropane) This also works with other reactive species, such as: - nitric acid + alkane --> nitroalkane
Carbonate minerals do react with HCl. Calcite and dolomite for instance.
Chalk and HCl do react together. When reacting, they release carbon dioxide..
bacause silver is hard and react with hard its hcl and h2s is soft that's why silver not react with h2s
Yes.
Any number of chemical moieties could react with alkanes to produce new compounds in a substitution reaction. For example, hydrohalic acids (HCl, HBr, HI) could react with an alkane to produce a haloalkane. Here, the halogen atom would replace one of the hydrogen atoms in the alkane. (HCl + ethane --> chloroethane) (HBr + propane --> bromopropane) This also works with other reactive species, such as: - nitric acid + alkane --> nitroalkane
No , it does not. Alkane react with ozone . Gil Tenne
NaCl and HCl doesn't react.
Carbonate minerals do react with HCl. Calcite and dolomite for instance.
Chalk and HCl do react together. When reacting, they release carbon dioxide..
Halite does not react with HCl.
bacause silver is hard and react with hard its hcl and h2s is soft that's why silver not react with h2s
probably not...
Yes.
Any reaction between a chloride and HCl.
Gaseous HCl in dry or humid air, can react very acidically.
yes, it does react. It produces NaCl + CO2 + H2O so it looks like this... NaHCO3 + HCl ---> NaCl + CO2 + H2O