Many transition metals will react with acids to form a salt and hydrogen gas. For example, zinc will react with hydrochloric acid to form the black-colored solid zinc chloride and hydrogen. The formula is: Zn+2HCl-->ZnCl2+H2.
The group 1 and 2 metals will often react with water, sometimes explosively. Sodium reacts with water to produce sodium hydroxide and hydrogen. The formula is: 2Na+2H2O-->2NaOH+H2.
The reactivity series of metals (see wikipedia -Reactivity series) shows a list of the metals that react.
Examples: platinum metals, gold, etc. But mixtures of acids can affect any metal.
Gold does not react with dilute hydrochloric acid. There are quite a few others including Tantalum etc.
This is not right it is not iron
what metals react with diluted acid
Gold Rexton
Nitric acid reacts strongly with many metals.
I only know 3 metals that react with acids to produce hydrogen. They are Zinc, iron and magnesium. There are 3 acids which react with them: and It will produce hydrogen gas which is the lightest known gas and is flammable :)
Calcium nitrate don't react with metals; a possible reaction is with the water from the solution.
A metal more active than hydrogen in the electromotive series will react with an acid to form hydrogen gas.
phosphoric acid
A metal that does not react to acid, oxygen or water does not exist.
metals which dont react with water or acid are called unreactive metals
yes
Metals that react well with water: Sodium - fizzes Potassium - burns Caesium - explodes Metals that react well with acids: Magnesium
Carbonic acid does react with metals as similar to the other acids. But in nature, carbonic acid molecule is unstable. It has an equilibrium where carbonic acid dissociates into a water molecule and a carbon dioxide molecule.
no all metals do not react with hydrochloric acids
Lots of metals react with acids. It depends on exactly what acid, and the concentration of that acid. A mixture of concentrated nitric acid and hydrochloric acid (aqua regia, royal water) will react with gold and other precious metals. The alkali metals will react readily with acid, as will most metals. You have to know that any metal with incomplete orbital has the ability to react with any proton donating species. (proton donating species are acids according to Bronston-Lowry theory)
Two metals that will react with dilute hydrochloric acid are zinc and magnesium.
No, inert metals as Gold, Platinum and Palladium do not react with hydrochloric acid.
No. First of all, the metal does not dissapear. When a a metal reacts with an acid it forms a corresponding salt, which usually then dissolves. Second, whther or not a reaction occurs depends on both the acid and the metal. Most metals will not react with a dilute weak acid. Some metals will not even react with most strong metals. Gold, platinum, and some platinum group metals will not react with acid except for aqua regia, a special mixture of hydrochloric and nitric acid. Ruthenium will not react with acid at all.
Metals whose surfaces are "passivated" by for example the formation of an insoluble oxide do not react with acid. An example is aluminium which is resistant to dilute acid.
Gold and platinum. 'Aqua regia' is a mixture of trhe acids, hydrochloric acid and nitric acid. This mixture will react with these metals.