No, benzoic acid is not soluble in hydrochloric acid. However if you boil the benzoic acid to where it is water soluable and add hydrochloric acid it forms it back into the solid
Yes. Benzoic acid reacts with NaOH (depending on the molarity), and becomes an extremely polar ion, which will dissolve in the water that is in the NaOH solution.
Are sodium oxide(Na2O), Magnesium oxide(MgO), Aluminium Oxide(Al2O3), Silicon(IV) Oxide(SiO2), Phosphorus pentoxide(P4O10) and Dichlorine monoxide(Cl2O) soluble in hexane?
No. Benzoic acid is NOT a stronger acid than HCl.
Yes, it is soluble
it is insoluble
no, because yo
no
This is a strong base/acid neutralization reaction with a product of salt and water. NaOH + HCl --> NaCl + H2O
It`s called acid(such as HCl,,,,PH=1)
The strength of an acid is the extent to which it is dissociated into ions in dilute solution, and cannot be calculated from a molarity, which is a measure of concentration, not strength. Hydrocholoric acid is a strong acid. It is completely dissociated in I M solution.
To calculate moles of HCl in 291.68 grams, use the molar mass of HCl which is 1 + 35.5 = 36.5g/mole. 291.68 g x 1 mol/36.5 g = 7.99 moles HCl (3 sig figs)
pH is not a measure of how strong an acid is, it is a measure of how acidic or basic a solution is. This depends on both the strength of the acid/base and how much is dissolved in a given amount of water. Any acid will produce a pH below 7, and a strong acid will usually produce a very low pH, but again, that depends on the concentration. However, a pH of 0-3 would be considered a strong acid. Yet concentrated glacial acetic acid although very corrosive and strong would not have a pH this low.
Hydrochloric acid, HCl
Yes but insignificant for practical use. Hydrogen iodide ( HI ) is even stronger! and HF is a significantly weaker acid than HCl.
Sulfuric is stronger than hydrocloric.But HCl also a strong acid.
Ethanoic acid (acetic acid) is a weak acid and hydrochloric acid (HCl) is a strong acid. So, ethanoic acid is NOT stronger than hydrochloric acid.
actually HBr is stronger acid than HCl so i think you got something mixed up
Both are strong acids (this means stronger than H3O+) but HI is stronger than HCl.
HCl is a stronger acid and will dissolve more of the shell than an equivalent concentration of nitric acid.
yes it is, because HBr is a stronger acid than HCl, therfore, HBr will have a weaker conjugate base, Br, than HCl, Cl
HCl + NaOH = H2O + NaCl Or, water and table salt--which will dissolve in water. Benzoic acid, C6H5COOH, will not be formed; neither of the two starting chemicals contains carbon, and benzoic acid contains a lot of it. - - - - - Benzoic acid and sodium chloride
You will get benzoic acid as a result. The benzoic salt will gain a Hydrogen from the HCl; thus, becoming benzoic acid, and the Cl shall remain by itself in suspension if you're mixing the two together in an aqueous solution.
HI is more stronger acid while H2Te is almost neutral.
There can be no such reaction. Perhaps you meant HCl(aq) + C6H5COONa to get C6H5COOH plus NaCl. That would be converting the sodium salt of benzoic acid (sodium benzoate) into benzoic acid and sodium chloride by using hydrochloric acid.