silicon reacts as a semi conductor so it reacts with almost anything.
It is slightly reactive with HCl. At the begining it starts making a few bubbles and then the bubles begin to grow
Si + 4 HCl = SiCl4 + 2 H2
Si + 2 HCl = SiCl2 + H2
No. If it were, every chemistry stockroom in the world would be in real trouble as the hydrochloric acid began dissolving the glass bottles it's stored in.
No, SiO2 is in glass. Glass does not react with HCl... if it did, that would be bad.
Silicon doesn't react with most acids, but will dissolve in hydrofluoric acid, because of the formation of a stable complex ion.
That's just how it is!
it dissolves into liquid
At normal conditions - not.
Chalk and HCl do react together. When reacting, they release carbon dioxide..
Yes, you can make silicon dioxide out of silicon.
Na0H + HCl ---> NaCl + H20
Silicon and oxygen combine to produce silicon dioxide, SiO2, which is found in nature as quartz or sand.
it is acidic!
Chalk and HCl do react together. When reacting, they release carbon dioxide..
Yes, you can make silicon dioxide out of silicon.
Na0H + HCl ---> NaCl + H20
Silicon and oxygen combine to produce silicon dioxide, SiO2, which is found in nature as quartz or sand.
it is acidic!
NaCl and HCl doesn't react.
The carbonates of the metals in group I reacts easily.
No, silicon dioxide is a molecule.
The reaction is balanced from the start. Na2CO3 + SiO2 --> Na2SiO3 + CO2
Silicon dioxide is a compound.
Silicon and oxygen, in this form. SiO2 Silicon dioxide.
Which one is mixture carbon dioxide = compound silicon = element silicon dioxide = compound or sand = mixture so sand is the answer.