No, despite the fact it contains carbon, sodium bicarbonate NaHCO3 is an inorganic salt.
'Hydrogen Carbonate???? Do you mean Carbonic Acid . (H2CO3) or a Bi-carbonate such as sodium bi-carbonate. )NaHCO3)
sodium carbonate doesn't give any gas on heating. its sodium bi-carbonate which gives co2 on heating.
Not directly. However there are edible products made with very small amount of this solution. By the way it's "Potassium Carbonate and Sodium Bi-Carbonate solution" AKA: alkaline water. Not Potassium Bi-carbonate.
Baking Soda
sodium bi carbonate
Baking soda is sodium bi-carbonate. Or sodium hydrogen carbonate. Its formula is NaHCO3. It is a union of sodium and the bi-carbonate polyatomic ion.
'Hydrogen Carbonate???? Do you mean Carbonic Acid . (H2CO3) or a Bi-carbonate such as sodium bi-carbonate. )NaHCO3)
sodium carbonate doesn't give any gas on heating. its sodium bi-carbonate which gives co2 on heating.
NaHCO3
Not directly. However there are edible products made with very small amount of this solution. By the way it's "Potassium Carbonate and Sodium Bi-Carbonate solution" AKA: alkaline water. Not Potassium Bi-carbonate.
Sodium bicarbonate is a solid, so no.
sodium bi carbonate
Baking Soda
Sodium carbonate is generally considered an inorganic compound, even though it contains carbon.
It is actually Hydrogen. Sodium Bicarbonate is properly known as Sodium Hydrogen Carbonate, and sometimes Sodium Acid Carbonate (Hydrogen makes it an acid)CompareNaHCO3 (sodium bicarbonate)Na2CO3 (sodium carbonate)Since sodium carbonate takes two sodium ions for each carbonate, and bicarbonate has only one, ratio of carbonate ions to sodium ion doubles, hence the term bicarbonate.
it contains sodium carbonate (inorganic), copper sulphate (inorganic) and sodium citrate (organic).
The anion. Sodium bi-sulphate has the formula NaHSO4 ; The sulphate anion. Baking soda is sodium bi-carbonate which has the formula NaHCO3 ; the Carbonate anion. The sulphate anion does not thermally decompose easily. The carbonate anion thermally decomposes to form water can carbon dioxide, (to make pastry rise).