You'd need to produce support for your underlying contention that calcium carbonate can make any phosphoric acid at all. I personally am not seeing it. Calcium carbonate contains neither hydrogen nor phosphorus, both of which are essential for making phosphoric acid. It does contain oxygen (also essential), but it's rather an odd way of obtaining an element that's readily present in the atmosphere.
The calcium salt of the acid used and carbon dioxide.
H2SO4 + CaCO3 ---> CaSO4 + H2O + CO2 Sulphuric acid reacts with calcium carbonate, forming calcium sulphate.
Yes, when hydrochloric acid reacts with calcium carbonate, the calcium carbonate will dissolve, producing carbon dioxide gas. This gas release can cause bubbling or foaming in the solution.
Sulfuric acid and calcium carbonate react to form calcium sulfate, carbon dioxide gas, and water. This is a chemical reaction where the acid reacts with the carbonate to form a salt, releasing carbon dioxide in the process.
To make calcium citrate, you would typically combine one molecule of citric acid with two molecules of calcium carbonate. So, for every 1 molecule of citric acid, you would need 2 molecules of calcium carbonate to produce calcium citrate.
To make calcium chloride, hydrochloric acid is needed. Calcium chloride is produced by the reaction between calcium carbonate and hydrochloric acid, resulting in calcium chloride, carbon dioxide, and water.
The reaction between calcium phosphate and sulfuric acid, producing calcium sulfate and phosphoric acid is a double replacement. Notice in the chemical equation that the calcium and hydrogen ions switch partners with the SO42- and PO43- ions. The generic formula for a double replacement is AB + CD --> AD + CB Ca3(PO4)2 + 3H2SO4 --> 3CaSO4 + 2H3PO4
CaCl2+CO2 Calcium Chloride+Carbon Dioxide
When calcium carbonate and hydrochloric acid react, they produce calcium chloride, water, and carbon dioxide gas. This is a chemical reaction where the calcium carbonate is broken down into its individual elements by the acid.
To make a 9N (normal) Phosphoric Acid solution, you will need to know the concentration of your Phosphoric Acid. The formula to calculate the volume of Phosphoric Acid required is: Volume (in liters) = (Desired Normality * Equivalent Weight of Phosphoric Acid * Volume of Solution) / Concentration of Phosphoric Acid.
It makes calcium chloride,water and carbon dioxide
The word equation is Calcium carbonate + sulphuric Acid = Calcium sulphate + Water + Carbon dioxide. The Balanced Reaction Eq'n is CaCO3(s) + H2SO4(aq) = CaSO4(s) + H2O(l) + CO2(g) NB REmember the general acid/carbonate reactiuon is Acid + Carbonate = Salt + Water + Carbon dioxide.