No, only calcium very slowly in steaming water
Yes it does react. It forms Calcium hydroxide and makes the water hot. It is because the reaction between CaO and water is an exothermic reaction
The solubility increase with the temperature, consequently the concentratiom is greater in warm water: but for calcium hydrogen carbonate and calcium carbonate the difference is not important.
All metals, if they do react with water at all, react faster in steam than in water. However, the metals that react SLOWLY with cold water are the metals from Group-IIA(Magnesium, Calcium, etc).
Metals like copper, silver, and gold do not react with cold water because they are less reactive. This is due to their position in the reactivity series, where they do not displace hydrogen from water.
Gold does not react with water or steam. i wouldn't totally agree with the above statment. There are 5 metals which don't not just 1...these are: .lead .copper .mercury .silver .gold
its not the co.pper line its the faucet stem or angle stop
alkali metals react violently in cold water
Copper does not react with water, but it slowly reacts with atmospheric oxygen forming a layer of brown-black copper oxide. Unlike the iron oxidation, this oxide prevents the bulk corrosion of parent material i.e. copper.
When drops of cold water are added to a white solid formed by heating calcium carbonate (CaCO3), a chemical reaction occurs where calcium hydroxide (Ca(OH)2) is formed. This reaction is a hydration reaction where water molecules react with calcium oxide to produce calcium hydroxide.
Mg does not react with cold water while Ca, Sr, and Ba react with cold water to form metal hydroxide and hydrogen gas.
potassium and sodium react very violently with cold water calcium reacts slowly with cold water Magnesium is not affected by water at room temperature or cold water.Magnesium reacts with water vapor only.
Iron will slowly rust in cold water.