If you mean Calcium as the metal, it is dissolved in water to create Ca(OH)2 a BASIC sollution, and it releases hydrogen from the water, so it is not acidic at all in "normal" terms :).
- Hope this helps :) and please correct this if it is wrong :)
Calcium carbonate is an alkali salt. Alkali salts are bases, and are formed from the neutralization reaction between a strong base and a weak acid. For example: Ca(OH)2 + H2CO3 --> CaCO3 + H2O strong base + weak acid ---> alkali salt + water
it is weak acid :)
It is a weak acid.
Weak.
Yes. Calcium carbonate is a salt and is formed from calcium reacting with carbonic acid. The salts of weak acids function as buffers. Carbonic acid is a weak acid.
Calcium Bromide is a white, granular salt, very deliquescent, odorless, having a pungent, saline and bitter taste.
Calcium carbonate is an alkali salt. Alkali salts are bases, and are formed from the neutralization reaction between a strong base and a weak acid. For example: Ca(OH)2 + H2CO3 --> CaCO3 + H2O strong base + weak acid ---> alkali salt + water
Weak.
It is a weak acid.
it is weak acid :)
It is a weak acid
Oxalic acid is a relatively strong weak acid. It has pKa1=1.27 and pKa2=4.28.
Yes. Calcium carbonate is a salt and is formed from calcium reacting with carbonic acid. The salts of weak acids function as buffers. Carbonic acid is a weak acid.
no it is a strong acid
Its a weak acid
It's a weak acid.
Strong acid