Sodium hypochlorite and sulfuric acid are both highly reactive and mixing them is considered highly dangerous. The reaction between the two is explosive and releases a lot of heat. The equation is: 2 HCl + NaCl ---- Cl2 + NaCl + H2O.
this reaction is similar to the one of a carbonate and acid. a salt and water are formed a gas is released.
Na2SO3(aq) + 2HCL(aq) --> 2NaCl(aq) + H2O(l) + SO2(g)
net ionic: 2H+(aq) + SO32-(aq) --> H2O(l) + SO2(g)
HCl + NaClO → NaCl + HClO
If there is an excess of HCl this a second reaction can occur
HCl + HClO → H2O +Cl2
With this, the overall reaction is
2HCl + NaOCl → H2O + NaCl + Cl2
If you are talking about the reaction between the two chemicals, then they will react to form calcium chloride, water, and toxic chlorine gas.
Chlorine gas. Don't do it.
to acidify the solution
Sulfuric acid.
Base
Alkaline
no
to acidify the solution
Sodium chloride cannot be obtained from sulfuric acid.
Sulfuric acid.
Not safely. Sodium hypochlorite is very alkaline, which on its own is enough to make it dangerous. Additionally, sodium hypochlorite will react with hydrochloric acid, which is in stomach acid, to produce chlorine gas, which is extremely toxic.
No -it is bleach and it is alkaline
Base
Alkaline
no
Sodium chloride doesn't react with sulfuric acid.
Sodium hypochlorite is a base. It is the conjugate base of the acid hypochrous acid. Meaning, it's the product when hypochlorous acid, HClO, reacts with a base, such as NaOH. The conjugate base of a weak acid is generally a strong base, as in this case. Sodium hypochlorite is the main ingredient in bleach, a strong base.
A few examples are alum, ammonium compounds (except for fertilizer), industrial bleaches (sodium or calcium hypochlorite), chemical catalysts, hydrazine, hydrochloric acid, hydrogen peroxide, inorganic sodium compounds, and sulfuric acid.
Sulfuric acid is better, as it catalyzes more reactions