No it does not.
yes i think so.
Sodium carbonate doesn't react with water; it is only dissolved and dissociated.
Carbonate and acid react and produce, carbon dioxide and water as products.
sulfuric acid in the rain water reacts with calcium carbonate.
Barium carbonate will react with nitric acid, producing barium nitrate, carbon dioxide, and water.
Yes, it is the ammonium hydroxide - NH4OH.
No it does not.
Sodium carbonate doesn't react with water; it is only dissolved and dissociated.
Carbonate and acid react and produce, carbon dioxide and water as products.
sulfuric acid in the rain water reacts with calcium carbonate.
Barium carbonate will react with nitric acid, producing barium nitrate, carbon dioxide, and water.
Calcium carbonate and sodium chloride doesn't react.
Yes, it is the ammonium hydroxide - NH4OH.
After this reaction a salt, carbon dioxide and water are formed.
No, it dosent. If a base can be dissolved in water, its corresponding metal oxide must be able to be dissolved in water. So you see copper hydroxide is solid, which means it can't be dissolved in water. So copper oxide can't react or be dissolved in water to form copper hydroxide.
Typically whenever carbonate compounds react with acids carbon dioxide gas (CO2) and water (H2O) is formed. For example: 2HNO3 + CaCO3 -----> H2O + CO2 + Ca(NO3)2 nitric acid + calcium carbonate -----> water + carbon dioxide + calcium nitrate
At standard temperature and pressure, calcium carbonate does not react with neutral water, but simply dissolves to a slight extent. If the water is sufficiently acidic as a result of other constituents, carbon dioxide gas can be displaced from the calcium carbonate.
Sodium hydrogen carbonate and nitric acid react to form sodium nitrate, carbon dioxide, and water.