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Calcium Chloride is CaCl2-------this is a salt Calcium Carbonate Is CaCo3------this is a base
No it does not.
hydrochloric acid + calcium carbonate ▬▬► calcium chloride + carbon dioxide + water
insoluble in water
Chalk is essentially calcium carbonate, CaCO3, and in not soluble in water to any significant extent.
No. Limestone is Calcium Carbonate. Limestone plus water makes wet calcium carbonate. With a very slight amount of calcium carbonate dissolving.
The solubility of calcium carbonate in water is very low; so calcium carbonate form a suspension.
Calcium carbonate is almost insoluble in water.
Chalk consists of calcium carbonate. It would be a heterogeneous mixture if colours were added to it.
Calcium carbonate weakly dissolves in water.
Calcium carbonate is practically insoluble in pure water; if the rain water is acid calcium carbonate may be dissolved.
The calcium carbonate reacts with the acid as per any carbonate: Calcium Carbonate + Acid -> Calcium Salt + Water + Carbon Dioxide
Calcium Chloride is CaCl2-------this is a salt Calcium Carbonate Is CaCo3------this is a base
calcium carbonate + Hydrochloric acid= Calcium chloride + water + carbon dioxide
No it does not.
The solubility of calcium carbonate in water is low - 0,15 g/100 mL at 25 0C.
No. Calcium carbonate is one of the minerals that water softeners are supposed to eliminate, or at least reduce.