Vinegar will do it.
There is a product called CLR which is available in grocery stores which removes lime deposits.
There are a few different ways to do this. If it is a really thick hard limescale, you may want to use a commercial product like CLR or LimeAway to remove it. If it is not as bad, you can safely use a mild acid like lemon juice or vinegar. NO! specifically on the CLR label it says not to use on aluminum, copper or brass
A mixture of lime and copper sulfate.
due to the acidic action of lime
you can use lime to neutrailise soil :)
Yes. Lime juice is more acidic, so it's safe. But you cannot substitute vinegar for lime juice safely.
chemical reaction between copper oxide and glucose
no
sterling silver is 97.5% pure silver and7.5 copper alloy. This copper alloy reacts to humid conditions and acidic skin by tarnishing (brown) and oxiding (black).Lime is very acidic fruit so copper in the silver is reacting to the acid in the lime and tarnishing or oxiding.Clean it as soon as possible with polishing cloth.
Copper sulfate, slaked lime and water are what is in bordeaux mixture.Specifically, the copper sulfate and the slaked lime each are dissolved in separate containers of water. The contents then will be combined in one container. The weight of the copper sulfate to the volume of water will determine the mixture's concentration.
Copper oxides are soluble in acids.
lime is applied in the pond so that the water to be clean and remove germs.