No. There is no carbon in either sodium sulphate or hydrochloric acid so they cannot produce a compound containing carbon.
sodium sulphate and carbon dioxide
Sodium Sulphate, Carbon Dioxide and Water OR Carbonic Acid
Sulphuric acid (H2SO4) reacts with sodium hydrogen carbonate (NaHCO3) to form sodium sulphate (Na2SO4), carbon dioxide (CO2), and water (H2O). The word equation for this reaction is: sulphuric acid + sodium hydrogen carbonate → sodium sulphate + carbon dioxide + water.
Sodium sulphate
When sodium carbonate and hydrochloric acid react, sodium chloride (table salt) is formed along with carbon dioxide and water.
since Na is a sodium + CO3 as a cabonat so it is sodium cabonate + IOH2O = sodium cabonate water haha
Dilute hydrochloric acid? Carbon dioxide gas escapes and leaves sodium chloride solution, possibly leaving either an excess of acid, or an excess of sodium carbonate.
aluminium sulphate solution rects with sodium bicarbonate to give aluminium hydroxide, sodium sulphate and carbon dioxide. Al2(SO4)3 +6 NaHCO3 = 3 Na2SO4 + 2Al(OH)3 + 6 CO2 This reaction can be seen in a foam based fire extinguisher
Sodium chloride is NaCl. Carbon dioxide is CO2.
Yes, sodium hydroxide does absorb carbon dioxide from the atmosphere. When exposed to carbon dioxide, sodium hydroxide reacts to form sodium carbonate and water.
To find the solubility of carbon dioxide in sodium hydroxide, you can conduct an experiment where you bubble carbon dioxide gas through a solution of sodium hydroxide and measure the amount of carbon dioxide that dissolves in the solution. You can then calculate the solubility of carbon dioxide in sodium hydroxide by dividing the amount of CO2 that dissolves by the volume of the solution.
Carbon dioxide react with sodium hydroxide.