Yes, zinc reacts with calcium sulphate . It reacts to produce zinc sulphate and calcium.
Yes, Ca is more reactive than Zn.
(So there is an exchange reaction, or redox, of Ca with Zn2+)
No. Calcium is more reactive than Zinc.
So, Zinc can't replace calcium and hence they don't react.
gold
Zinc oxide and sulphuric acid
No. The zinc will react with the ferrous sulphate, dissolving the zinc and forming solid iron. This is due to the positions of iron and zinc in the activity series.See the Related Questions for more information about the activity series.
Nope, Calcium is stronger then the iron so it keeps its hold on the carbonate
Zinc and iron sulphate do react. Zinc is higher in the reactivity series than iron. It can therefore displace sulphate from the iron and 'take' the sulfate. Zinc + Iron Sulphate ------------> Zinc Sulphate + Iron The reactivity series is as follows: Potassium Sodium Lithium Calcium Magnesium Aluminium Zinc Iron Tin Lead Copper Silver Gold Platinum There are many clever ways to remember this too. This is the metal reactivity series BTW(by the way)
yup.
zinc is more reactive than copper hence it displaces the copper in copper sulphate solution to become zinc sulphate and copper metal is formed
This base is zinc hydroxide.
gold
Zinc and sulfuric acid will react to form zinc sulphate and hydrogen gas.
Zinc oxide and sulphuric acid
No. The zinc will react with the ferrous sulphate, dissolving the zinc and forming solid iron. This is due to the positions of iron and zinc in the activity series.See the Related Questions for more information about the activity series.
yes cos there is loads of pikachus present
No, it is not. Since zinc is highly reactive, therefore it will react with copper sulphate to form zinc sulphate and deposit copper.
When zinc sulphate and lithium react together, they form lithium sulphate and zinc as products. Zinc is a grayish-white metal, while lithium sulphate is a white solid. Therefore, after the reaction, you would observe a greyish-white solid and a white solid.
Nope, Calcium is stronger then the iron so it keeps its hold on the carbonate
Zinc and iron sulphate do react. Zinc is higher in the reactivity series than iron. It can therefore displace sulphate from the iron and 'take' the sulfate. Zinc + Iron Sulphate ------------> Zinc Sulphate + Iron The reactivity series is as follows: Potassium Sodium Lithium Calcium Magnesium Aluminium Zinc Iron Tin Lead Copper Silver Gold Platinum There are many clever ways to remember this too. This is the metal reactivity series BTW(by the way)