No, polymers and plastics do not react with acids.
There is a fault with the question. Acids react with metal -TRUE What metals react - all will with the right acid - some need extremely strong acids -gold for example needs aqua regia
Sulfuric acid is a compound as are all acids.
Carbonates react with hydrochloric acid.
Sulfuric acid is a compound as are all acids.
no all metals do not react with hydrochloric acids
Acids and bases react with one another to form a compound called?Acid and Base react to form a salt and water.HCl + NaOH = NaCl + HOH (H2O)The formula of all acids start with H and the formula of all bases end in OH. So every acid supplies an H+1 ion and every base supplies an OH-1 ion. H+1 + OH-1 = HOH ( H2O). The - ion of the acid and the + ion of the base form an ionic compound called a salt>
Citric acid, like all acids, is a compound.
Not all the time. Only acids that react with metals will give of Hydrogen (H) Acid + Metal --> Salt + Hydrogen
Basalt doesn't react with acid. Igneous rocks in general rarely react with acid.
No. First of all, the metal does not dissapear. When a a metal reacts with an acid it forms a corresponding salt, which usually then dissolves. Second, whther or not a reaction occurs depends on both the acid and the metal. Most metals will not react with a dilute weak acid. Some metals will not even react with most strong metals. Gold, platinum, and some platinum group metals will not react with acid except for aqua regia, a special mixture of hydrochloric and nitric acid. Ruthenium will not react with acid at all.
No. Acetic acid is a compound as are all acids.
No, inert metals as Gold, Platinum and Palladium do not react with hydrochloric acid.