No. Silicates do not easily react with acids.
No. That is a very fortunate as phosphorus is commonly stored in water.
For example uranium, mercury, vanadium don't react with water but can react with acids.
Many acids will react with bases and, depending on the acid, some metals.
yes
No. Silicates do not easily react with acids.
citric acids react with each other
Many plastics and glasses will not react with most acids.
Acids react -in most cases, but not exclusively- well with basic (alkaline) compounds.
No. That is a very fortunate as phosphorus is commonly stored in water.
For example uranium, mercury, vanadium don't react with water but can react with acids.
Phosphorus and helium will not react. Phosphorus can react with a variety of different elements, but helium reacts with nothing because it is a noble gas with a full valence shell of electrons.
Many acids will react with bases and, depending on the acid, some metals.
yes
An explosion
carbohydrates, hydrogen, oxygen, nitrogen, phosphorus
phosphorus is present in nucleic acids and not in proteins