Sodium chloride, Water, Sulfur and Sulfur dioxide
Produces Sodium iodide, Water, Sulfur and Sulfur dioxide
Sodium chloride is formed when sodium hydroxide and hydrochloric acid react. This is a neutralization reaction where the sodium hydroxide (a base) and hydrochloric acid (an acid) combine to form a salt (sodium chloride) and water.
Sodium chloride and hydrochloric acid doesn't react.
Sodium carbonate react with hydrochloric acid !
When sodium carbonate and hydrochloric acid react, sodium chloride (table salt) is formed along with carbon dioxide and water.
HCl (hydrochloric acid) and NaOH (sodium hydroxide) will react to NaCl (sodium chloride) and water.
Sodium chloride doesn't react with hydrocholric acid.
The reaction between sodium thiosulfate and hydrochloric acid is a redox reaction, where the sulfur in thiosulfate changes oxidation state. The balanced equation for this reaction is: 2Na2S2O3 + 2HCl -> 2NaCl + SO2 + S + H2O.
If you mix sodium thiosulfate and hydrochloric acid it makes sulphur + sulphur dioxide + Sodium chloride and water · 2HCl + Na₂ S₂O₃ -> 2NaCl + SO₂ + S + H₂O It also forms a collide which is a mixture when particles don't settle
Sodium hydroxide is a base and hydrochloric acid is an acid. Both are not same.
Sulfuric acid reacts easily with sodium hydroxide to form sodium sulfate and water because sulfuric acid is a strong acid and sodium hydroxide is a strong base. This reaction occurs because both acids and bases react to form water and a salt. Hydrochloric acid may not react in the same way because it is a weaker acid compared to sulfuric acid.
This is the hydrochloric acid and sodium hydroxide:NaOH + HCl = NaCl + H2O