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Dilute sulphuric acid is an aqueous solution, formed by adding water to sulphuric acid, resulting in a homogeneous mixture.
No. Generally all acids are liquid or aqueous.
Aqueous sulphuric acid is a solution which contains both sulphuric acid and water. So yes, it is a mixture...there is a term for two solutions which are "mixed" together but i forget what this is called.
The mole fraction of HCl in 20 percent aqueous solution is 0.21.
-288 kJ/mol
If you boil the said mixture, and the sulphuric acid concentration is at least 50%, the silver will dissolve.
The use of aqueous solutions for the recovery of metals. Example: Leaching of copper oxide ores using a sulphuric acid solutions (or solution containing sulphuric acid). The Copper can then be recovered from solution using solvent extraction and electrowinning.
The mole fraction of HCl is 0.34.
7,00 kJ/molKnow that this is an extremely rare information.
H2SO4 + 2NaOH ---> Na2SO4 + 2H20 sulphuric acid + sodium hydroxide ----> sodium sulphate + water
Change of color, formation of a gas (bubbles), or formation of a precipitate. (2 aqueous solutions react and form a solid).
A precipitation reaction contains two aqueous reactants, one aqueous product, and one solid product. A precipitation reaction will produce an insoluble product.