No, because it is ignite.
Nickel forms Hydrogen gas when reacts with dilute acid.
When sulphuric acid is added to zinc granules , the gas produced is hydrogen gas. Zinc displaces hydrogen from sulphuric acid.
Lead is not reactive enough to displace hydrogen from dilute HCl or dilute sulfuric acid. The reduction potential of lead is lower than that of hydrogen, so it cannot effectively displace hydrogen in these reactions. Other metals like zinc or aluminum are used instead due to their higher reactivity and ability to displace hydrogen.
H2SO4(dilute)
cu + H2so4 --->cuso4+2H two molecules of hydrogen evolves........
When copper reacts with dilute sulphuric acid, copper sulfate and hydrogen gas are produced. The copper sulfate formed will be a blue solution. This reaction is a redox reaction, where copper is oxidized and hydrogen is reduced.
No. It is a mixture of sulphuric acid and water.
A base will react with dilute sulphuric acid to form a salt. The reaction involves the acid donating a hydrogen ion to the base, forming water, and the remaining ions from the acid and base combine to form the salt.
When copper oxide is added into excess dilute sulphuric acid, it reacts to form copper sulfate and water. Additionally, hydrogen gas is evolved during the reaction.
Silver is below hydrogen in the reactivity series, so it cannot displace hydrogen from dilute sulfuric acid, which is a less reactive acid compared to hydrochloric acid. Therefore, silver does not evolve hydrogen gas when reacting with dilute sulfuric acid.
Lead reacts very slowly with dilute sulphuric acid to give lead sulphate and hydrogen gas.Pb(s) + H2SO4 (aq) -> PbSO4(aq) + H2(g)
the answer is dilute sulphuric acid... thats what everyone says