react with some metals to produce salt and hydrogen gas.
No. Metals liberate hydrogen gas from acids.
Hydrogen ions give acids their acidic properties.
not sure, someone please help me
No, dilute acids such as HCl, HNO3 etc can cause severe burns to the eyes, throat and skin. They are still dangerous and poisonous.
Acids in food are safe because they are dilute and most are classified as weak-meaning that they do not ionize(give up protons) easily. Strong or weak classification does not necessarily relate to toxicity, hydrofluoric and hydrocyanic acids are classified as weak acids, but are both extremely toxic. Phosphoric acid is a moderate strength acid but it is present in dilute form in many cola drinks D: weak
Concentrated acids are more dangerous in generally, but some dilute acids can still be dangerous as well.
Concentrated and dilute acids will give different pH values
When dilute acids and metals are mixed you will get Hydrogen gas and salts
The metals present in bronze are copper and zinc. Though copper does not react with dilute acids, zinc does.
Compare and contrast the properties of dilute and concentrated solutions is because you can dilute you solvent into a solution and then you have a concentrated solution.
No, this would not be a good way. Copper is very unreactive towards dilute acids.
No!'Dilute' and 'concentrated' are properties related to the number of particles within a given volume. 'Strong' and 'weak' are properties related to the number of particles which dissociate in certain conditions. The two are completely independent; altering the concentration is a simple enough matter, but to change strong acids (such as hydrogen fluoride and hydrogen chloride) into weak acids (such as ethanoic/acetic acid and ammonium) would require altering fundamental properties of the universe.
Yes, concentrated acids and bases are more corrosive than dilute acids and bases
Gold , silver
gold and silver.
Yes, because they are ALREADY dissolved.
No. Metals liberate hydrogen gas from acids.