Solid (S), Liquid (L) Gas (G), and Aqueous (Aq).
The term "Hydroiodic acid" most likely refers to a solution of Hydrogen Iodide in Water, which is an aqueous solution (AQ) However, Hydrogen Iodide, HI is a gas at room temperature, and forms a liquid at -34OC, and a solid at -51OC
Actually, there are four states (Not types) of matter. Solid, liquid, gas, and plasma, though the first three are what you are looking for. Think of an ice cube. It starts out as a solid; leave is out in the sun, and it melts, turning it into a liquid. Later, it evaporates, turning into a gas. If this is for school purposes, surprise your teacher by telling them about plasma.
Ca + 2HNO3 --> Ca(NO3)2 + 2H ...i think...?
The state bird is a California valley quail, the state tree is a California Redwood, and the state flower is a golden poppy.
CuNO3 can be found as both a solid and as an aqueous solution.
Solid (S), Liquid (L) Gas (G), and Aqueous (Aq).
The term "Hydroiodic acid" most likely refers to a solution of Hydrogen Iodide in Water, which is an aqueous solution (AQ) However, Hydrogen Iodide, HI is a gas at room temperature, and forms a liquid at -34OC, and a solid at -51OC
solid (s) gas (g) liquid (l) aqueous (aq)
Is may be written (aq), meaning aqueous, beside the chemical formula. Example =NaOH(aq) + Zn ---> Na2Zn(OH)4 + H2This equation is for "Sodium Zincate"
In a chemical equation it it '(s)'. e.g. 2HCl(aq) + CaCO3(s) = CaCL2(aq) + H2O(l) + CO2(g) (aq) = aqueous (water based solution). (s) = solid (l) = liquid (g) = gas
. After the chemical formula for each compound
Dissolved Ammonia is generally gaseous ammonia reacting with water to form both NH3 (aq) molecules (i.e. ammonia molecules hydrogen bonded with water) and NH4+(aq) and OH- (aq) ions. These are all in solution, so technically its a liquid.
(s)=solid and (aq)=aqueous also (g)=gas
Dissolved Ammonia is generally gaseous ammonia reacting with water to form both NH3 (aq) molecules (i.e. ammonia molecules hydrogen bonded with water) and NH4+(aq) and OH- (aq) ions. These are all in solution, so technically its a liquid.
NaOH is normally a crystalline solid at room tempoerature. However, in the lab. it is dissolved in water so it becomes aqueous (aq) The prefix '3' indicates the molar ratio to balance a reacting equation. e.g. 3NaOH)aq) + H3PO4(aq) = Na3PO4(aq) + 3H2O(l) Note the molar ratios are 3:1::1:3
(aq)- aqueous: Is when you dissolve something into waterEx. NaCl(s) into Na+(aq) Cl- (aq)-So it changes from a solid into aqueous ions.-Acids are mainly aqueous(l)- Liquid: On a molecular level the molecules of a liquid are arranged, or ordered somewhere between the order of a solid and the randomness of a gas.-The main difference would be that at an aqueous state, something is already dissolved into it to create a different substance