When acids react with a carbonate or a hydrogencarbonate (or a metal carbonate or a metal hydrogencarbonate) carbon dioxide, water and a salt solution is produced. That is:
acid + metal --> carbon dioxide + water + salt solution
An example is the following ionic equation:
CH3COOH(aq) + NaHCO3(s) --> CO2(g) + H2O(l) + Na+(aq) + CH3COO-(aq)
You can see this reaction occur when you mix vinegar with some bicarbonate soda (sodium hydrogencarbonate), which is the reaction they use in those little volcanoes you make in the school sand pit ahahaha lol this answer is from Jennifer and by the way She rules jk i suck
When acids react with carbonates, salt, water and carbon dioxide are produced.
An example would be
2HCl + CaCO3 -----> CaCl2 + H2O + CO2
The more general ionic equation is CO32- + 2H+ ------> CO2 + H2O
Yes, almost all acids will react with carbonate when they are at least stronger than Hydrogen carbonate acid (HCO3-) which is a very weak one (pKa=10.25).
CaCO3 + 2HCl --> CaCl2 + CO2 + H2O
Like this. Producing a salt, carbon dioxide gas and water.
a gas forms (carbon dioxide)
Carbonates such as limestone react with acids and so are weathered very quickly. It doesn't need even to be polluted rain, as it reacts with even the carbonic acid present all the time in rain.
Rhyolite does not react with acid. Igneous rocks in general rarely react with acid.
Tin can not only react with citric acid, it can react with any acid.
Carbon dioxide gas is produced when a carbonate reacts with an acid.A reaction between an acid and a carbonate forms a salt, carbon dioxide and water as the only products.acid+ carbonate -------> salt+ carbon dioxide + waterExample:Nitric acid and sodium carbonate ---> sodium nitrate and carbon dioxide and water2HNO3 + Na2CO3 ---> 2NaNO3 + CO2 + H2O
it depends on how strong the acid is
Carbonates react with hydrochloric acid.
No, any strong acid will react with carbonates.
As carbonates are mildly basic, anything acid will react with them (releasing carbon dioxide gas).
The carbonates will react with acid to form carbon dioxide, a gas which turns lime water cloudy, water, and a salt.
when any carbonates react with hydrochloric acid will be i.e. sodium carbonate+hydrochloric acid =sodium chloride
carbon dioxide
Bases dont really react with carbonates, but acid does.
the acid eats away at carbonates
Basalt doesn't react with acid. Igneous rocks in general rarely react with acid.
Using Lewis's theory of acids and bases, an acid is an electron pair acceptor, while a base is an electron pair donor.As, 2 donors can't react... Bases do not react with each otherAs, Carbonates and Hydrogencarbonates are basic in nature they don't react with bases...So in short they don't react
The acid that makes carbonates is carbonic acid.
When moist, the acid is able to react with the carbonates to create carbon dioxide gas, which creates tiny bubles in the mixture, making the cake very light, rather than solid or stodgy.