You will see Steam and a very hydrothermic reaction
The calcium could react with the moisture on your skin, and calcium reacts with water by releasing hydrogen,I think it also boils, also, if you look on youtube for a video, you can see what calcium does to the water.
A reaction between an acid and a carbonate gives a salt, water and carbon dioxide. So the word equation is: acid + carbonate -----> salt + carbon dioxide + water eg: hydrochloric acid + calcium carbonate ----> calcium chloride + carbon dioxide + water See: http://www.sky-web.net/science/reaction-types.htm
Limestone is a compound known chemically as calcium carbonate. It reacts with hydrochloric acid to form calcium chloride, carbon dioxide gas and water. The carbon dioxide is responsible for the fizzing you see in the reaction. The reaction is as follows: CaCO3 + 2HCl --> CaCl2 + CO2 + H2O
a green one
black color ppt
The calcium could react with the moisture on your skin, and calcium reacts with water by releasing hydrogen,I think it also boils, also, if you look on youtube for a video, you can see what calcium does to the water.
CaO is the chemical formula of calcium oxide.
CO2 (Carbon Dioxide). Carbon dioxide in the gas you put the limewter near reacts with calcium hydroxde to form white particle solids of calcium carbonate which is sparing soluble. you see these particles as a suspension, much like milk
Lime water reacts with carbon dioxide to produce a precipitate of calcium carbonate (CaCO3): Ca(OH)2 (aq) + CO2 (g) → CaCO3 (s) + H2O (l) As you can see, it also produces water (H20). Thus, lime water can be used to detect the presence of carbon dioxide.
Let's see! CuO + H2SO4 --> CuSO4 + H2O ======================== This reaction is what I think would theoretically happen here; a salt, copper sulfate, and water produced.
A reaction between an acid and a carbonate gives a salt, water and carbon dioxide. So the word equation is: acid + carbonate -----> salt + carbon dioxide + water eg: hydrochloric acid + calcium carbonate ----> calcium chloride + carbon dioxide + water See: http://www.sky-web.net/science/reaction-types.htm
A reaction between an acid and a carbonate gives a salt, water and carbon dioxide. So the word equation is: acid + carbonate -----> salt + carbon dioxide + water eg: hydrochloric acid + calcium carbonate ----> calcium chloride + carbon dioxide + water See: http://www.sky-web.net/science/reaction-types.htm
because when it combined with water you will see it boiling
Exothermic reaction of calcium oxide 1AimTo see how the mass of calcium oxide affects the temperature change produced in a reaction with waterTheoryAdding Calcium Oxide to water produces an exothermic reaction as aqueous Calcium Hydroxide is formed. The total energy released will increase as more bonds are broken by using a greater mass of Calcium HydroxideEquipmentCaO powderDe-ionised water50 ml measuring cylinderInsulating beakerBalance (.01g resolution)Temperature probe and data loggerStirring rodMethodIn an insulating beaker combine 50ml of water with 1g of CaOStir and record the maximum temperature reached using a temperature probe and dataloggerRepeat the experiment by using fresh water and increasing the mass of CaO used by 1gSafetyAs CaO will react exothermically with water care should be taken to avoid contact with skin where reaction with moisture could cause irritation and in extreme cases burns.
calcium
Because the acetic acid in the vinegar reacts with the solid calcium carbonate crystals that make up the eggshell, separating them into their calcium and carbonate parts, the calcium ions floats free and the carbonate makes the bubbles (carbon dioxide) that you can see on the egg. The protein that binds the calcium and carbonate is the froth that you can see on the top.
Limestone is a compound known chemically as calcium carbonate. It reacts with hydrochloric acid to form calcium chloride, carbon dioxide gas and water. The carbon dioxide is responsible for the fizzing you see in the reaction. The reaction is as follows: CaCO3 + 2HCl --> CaCl2 + CO2 + H2O