Al + H2so4= AlSo2 + H2o
The word equation for the reaction between aluminium hydroxide and sulphuric acid is: aluminium hydroxide + sulphuric acid → aluminium sulphate + water.
Zinc+sulphuric acid-sulphate+hydrogen
Reactive metal + acid --> salt + hydrogen Sulphuric acid makes sulphate salts, so: Calcium + sulphuric acid --> calcium sulphate + hydrogen (As a symbol equation: Ca + H2SO4 --> CaSO4 + H2)
Sulphuric acid + Zinc ----> Zinc sulphate + Hydrogen H2SO4 + Zn ----> ZnSO4 + H2 (no balancing needed)
This equation is:Mg + H2SO4 = MgSO4 + H2
You wrote the wrong question. It should be: What is the balanced equation of ammonium sulphate from ammonium and dilute sulphuric acid? Well the answer will be (NH4)+1(S04)-2 which equals to (NH4)2 (SO4)
As aluminium is a reactive metal, it will oxidise in air to form a hard coating of aluminium oxide which surrounds the metal. To observe the reaction of sulphuric acid and aluminium, this coating must first be specially removed. Effervescence will be observed, and hydrogen gas will be produced. aluminium + sulphuric acid (reacts to form) aluminium sulphate + hydrogen gas
The equation is:2 KOH + H2SO4 = K2SO4 + 2 H2O
This equation is 3 BaCl2 + Al2(SO4)3 -> 3 Ba(SO4) + 2 AlCl3.
Crystals or lumps of aluminium sulphate can be any size.
Sulphuric acid (H2SO4) reacts with sodium hydrogen carbonate (NaHCO3) to form sodium sulphate (Na2SO4), carbon dioxide (CO2), and water (H2O). The word equation for this reaction is: sulphuric acid + sodium hydrogen carbonate → sodium sulphate + carbon dioxide + water.
Zinc oxide cannot be used with sulphuric acid to prepare zinc sulphate. This is because zinc oxide is insoluble in sulphuric acid, and therefore, it would not react to form zinc sulphate.