Nope, Limestone reacts on contact, dolomite if scratched to increase its surface area or heating the acid. Anhydrite does not under most circumstances. This fact is used to tell the difference on carbonate wells, among other things
HCl and NaHO, or in other words, hydrochloric acid and sodium hydroxide(lye).The reason for this is that when an acid and a base react together they create water and a type of salt. When HCl and NaHO react they create water and table salt. You can also reverse this reaction by mixing table salt and water and heating it up, which will give you the dangerous chemicals mentioned before.
Mg + 2HCl ------> MgCl2 + H2 73g of HCl reacts with 24g of Mg 1g of HCl reacts with 24/73g 9.125g of HCl reacts with 24/73*9.125= 3g of Mg
Rhyolite does not react with acid. Igneous rocks in general rarely react with acid.
Tin can not only react with citric acid, it can react with any acid.
Chlorine reacts with water to form a mixture of hydrochloric acid and chloric(1) acid. The word and symbol equations are below: Chlorine + Water -> Hydrochloric Acid + Chloric(1) Acid Cl2 + H2O -> HCl + HOCl
becoz HCL aqueous s has an ability to react with bases and it changes the blue litmus in to red colour hence HCL gas is noit an acid but HCL aqueous an acid.
Sodium will react violently with dilute hydrochloric acid.
LiOH and HCl
HCl is more acidic.. so it reacts faster.
HCl fully ionizes in water, being a strong acid: HCl + H2O --> Cl- + H3O+
Yes. Muriatic acid is one of the historical names for hydrochloric acid, HCl. Fe + 2 HCl -> H2 + FeCl2
HCl and KCl do NOT react
The reaction is: NaOH + HCl = NaCl + H2O HCl and NaCl cannot react, the anion is the same.
HCl (hydrochloric acid) and NaOH (sodium hydroxide) will react to NaCl (sodium chloride) and water.
Because HCl react with bases, salts, oxides, metals, the solution has an acidic pH and HCl dissociate forming hydrogen ions, H+.
Hydrochloric acid dissolves in water but does not react with it; there is no equation.
SOCl2 + HCOOH => SO2 + HCl + CO