Some salts are melted, other sublime, other are thermally decomposed.
Metals are generally good conductors of electricity and heat. They react with acids to produce salts. They are malleable and ductile.
No, it will not
The reaction is different for each salt: melting, thermal decomposition, explosion etc.
That depends on the type of acid. Many different chemicals can be acidic, so therefore when not acidic they could vary on what they react with.
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Yes, metals can react with bases to form salts through a process called neutralization. The metal hydroxide and the base react to form a salt and water. The salt formed will depend on the specific metal and base involved in the reaction.
No, Acids react with metals to form salts.
salts
salts
You want something that reacts with water and is exothermic. An example would be an alkali metal (such as sodium), or perhaps oxygen salts that react with water
Usually they react to form a slat and water.
Metals, salts, hydroxides