neutralization with evolution of carbon dioxide
The word equation for the reaction between acid and metal carbonate is acid + metal carbonate → salt + water + carbon dioxide.
This is considered an acid/base reaction.
The word equation for the reaction between magnesium carbonate and sulfuric acid is Magnesium Carbonate + Hyrdocholric Acid > Magnesum Chloride + Carbon Dioxide + Water.
When a carbonate, such as calcium carbonate, reacts with an acid, such as hydrochloric acid, it undergoes a chemical reaction and produces carbon dioxide gas, water, and a salt. The reaction can be represented by the general equation: Carbonate + Acid -> Carbon Dioxide + Water + Salt.
When an acid reacts with a carbonate, it produces carbon dioxide gas, water, and a salt. The general chemical equation for this reaction is: acid + carbonate → carbon dioxide + water + salt.
lithium carbonate + hydrochloric acid ---> lithium chloride + carbon dioxide + water
The reaction between sulfamic acid and calcium carbonate produces calcium sulfamate, water, and carbon dioxide. This is a double displacement reaction where the carbonate ion in calcium carbonate exchanges places with the sulfate ion in sulfamic acid.
magnesium carbonate + sulfuric acid = magnesium oxide= carbon dioxide
Yes, the reaction between hydrochloric acid and copper carbonate is exothermic. This means that it releases heat during the reaction.
No, the reaction between hydrochloric acid and calcium carbonate is not a first order reaction. It is a decomposition reaction where the rate of reaction will not be constant as the concentration of the reactants change over time.
When calcium carbonate, or any carbonate is placed in acid, the carbonate ion (CO3^2-) accepts protons from the acid, forming carbonic acid (H2CO3), which is unstable and spontaneous breaks down into carbon dioxide gas (the cause of the bubbles) and water. H2CO3 --> CO2 + H2O
The reaction described is a chemical reaction known as neutralization. In this reaction, an acid (carbonic acid H2CO3) reacts with a base (sodium carbonate Na2CO3) to form a salt (sodium carbonate Na2CO3), water (H2O), and carbon dioxide (CO2).