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It converts the calcium into Calcium acetate with removal of hydrogen gas,Ca + 2CH3COOH = Ca(CH3COO)2 + H2
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Calcium + Sulfuric acid = Hydrogen gas + Calcium Sulfate.
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Yes very well it produces calcium chloride, carbon dioxide, and water. The reaction is CaCO3 + 2HCl --> H2O + CO2 + CaCl2 This occurs because the carbonate ion pulls hydrogen ions away from the hydrochloric acid, forming carbonic acid which is unstable and spontaneously decomposes into water and carbon dioxide
Nitric acid cannot prepare hydrogen because it is a strong oxidizing agent. When nitric acid comes into contact with reducing agents like hydrogen, it undergoes a redox reaction where it gets reduced to nitrogen gas instead of producing hydrogen gas.
Calcium+hydrochloric acid = calcium chloride+ hydrogen the base for any equation is metal+acid=hydrogen+salt
You can prepare hydrogen by adding magnesium to hydrochloric acid. hydrochloric acid + magnesium = magnesium chloride + hydrogen.
The Calcium displaces hydrogen from the nitric acid, producing calcium nitrate and hydrogen gas. Ca + 2HNO3 --> Ca(NO3)2 + H2
Calcium can react with hydrochloric acid. The products formed are calcium chloride and hydrogen gas.
From the reaction between calcium and nitric acid result calcium nitrate and hydrogen.
Product will be metal salt and hydrogen Ex.) Hydrochloric acid and zinc ---> zinc chloride and hydrogen 2HCl + Zn ---> ZnCl2 + H2 Sulphuric acid + magnesium ---> magnesium sulphate and hydrogen H2SO4 + Mg ---> MgSO4 + H2 Ethanoic acid and calcium ---> calcium ethanoate and hydrogen (Acetic acid and calcium ---> calcium acetate and hydrogen , using the older names) 2CH3COOH + Ca---> Ca(OOCCH3)2 + H2
Yes. When most metals react with dilute hydrochloric acid, metal chloride and hydrogen gas are the products. In the case of calcium, calcium chloride and hydrogen gas are produced.
Calcium reacts with hydrochloric acid to produce Calcium chloride and hydrogen gas.Ca +2 HCl -----> CaCl2 + H2
Hydrogen gas (H2)
It is a chemical reaction. The products are calcium chloride and hydrogen gas.
No. The radon and neon will no react at all. If heated the calcium and hydrogen may combine to form calcium hydride, which is a strong base.