CaSO4 is neather acid or base it is a salt which means it is nutreal.
i think salt
CaO is a base
A strong base; you can tell by the OH
Calcium chlorate is a salt.
Base
base
base
CaSo4
Acid is Sulphuric Acid Base is Calcium Oxide. The word equation is Calcium oxide + sulphuric Acid = Calcium sulphate + Water. The Balanced reaction equation is CaO)s) + H2SO4(aq) = CaSO4(s) + H2O(l)
The balanced equation will be: H2SO4 + Ca(OH)2 = CaSo4 + 2H2O One molecule each of sulfuric acid and calcium hydroxide react to give one molecule of calcium sulfate and TWO molecules of water.
acid + base → salt + water
H2SO4 + Ca(OH)2 --> CaSO4 + 2H2O Balance the equation by putting a 2 in front of H2O. Sulphuric acid added to Calcium Hydroxide will form Calcium Sulphate along with water. This is an example of neutralisation reaction where an acid is added to a base, forming a salt and a by product of water.
CaSo4
Acid is Sulphuric Acid Base is Calcium Oxide. The word equation is Calcium oxide + sulphuric Acid = Calcium sulphate + Water. The Balanced reaction equation is CaO)s) + H2SO4(aq) = CaSO4(s) + H2O(l)
Ca(OH)2 + H2SO4 --> CaSO4 + 2H2O Acid base neutralization reaction producing a salt and water.
The balanced equation will be: H2SO4 + Ca(OH)2 = CaSo4 + 2H2O One molecule each of sulfuric acid and calcium hydroxide react to give one molecule of calcium sulfate and TWO molecules of water.
acid + base → salt + water
Calcium Sulfate = CaSO4
Ca + H2SO4 -----> CaSO4 + H2
Ca + H2SO4 --> CaSO4 + H2
The balanced equation for Calcium Fluoride and sulfuric acid :- CaF2 + H2SO4 = Caso4 + 2HF
H2SO4 + Ca(OH)2 --> CaSO4 + 2H2O Balance the equation by putting a 2 in front of H2O. Sulphuric acid added to Calcium Hydroxide will form Calcium Sulphate along with water. This is an example of neutralisation reaction where an acid is added to a base, forming a salt and a by product of water.
Ca + H2SO4 --> CaSO4 + H2 So, the products are calcium sulfate and hydrogen gas.
HCl + CaSO4 --> No reaction because sulphate salts are very stable and can not be broken down with the help of any acid. If aqueous HCl is added to anhydrous CaSO4 and then mixture is heated to dryness then dihydrated Calcium sulphate, CaCO4.2H2O (Gypsum) may form.