Bubbles,mist,fog
To rust iron with hydrochloric acid, you would typically first clean the iron surface and then expose it to the acid. The acid will start to react with the iron, creating iron chloride and eventually leading to rust formation over time. It is important to handle hydrochloric acid with care as it can be corrosive and produce hazardous fumes.
When iron (Fe) is added to hydrochloric acid (HCl), the iron reacts with the acid to form iron (II) chloride (FeCl2) and hydrogen gas (H2). This is a single displacement reaction in which the more reactive iron displaces the hydrogen from the acid.
When iron reacts with hydrochloric acid, you will typically see bubbles of hydrogen gas being released. The iron will dissolve, forming iron chloride, which can give the solution a greenish color. Additionally, the solution may become warmer due to the exothermic nature of the reaction.
Fe + 2HCl --> FeCl2 + H2 Because the iron is being oxidized, giving an electron(s) to the reducing agent, chlorine ( Fe oxidized, FeCl2, reduced ). What you see above is a standard ionic reaction between a metal and a strong acid that produces a salt, iron chloride, and hydrogen gas.
Let's see. FeO + H2SO4 --> FeSO4 + H2O Iron II sulfate ( also called ferrous sulfate ), a salt, and water.
When sulfuric acid reacts with iron, it produces iron sulfate and hydrogen gas. The hydrogen gas is released as bubbles, while the iron sulfate remains in solution. This reaction can be exothermic and produce heat.
It is under the ash tray in the center console. Just remove the tray and you will see it..............
its an acid to prove it put a penny in a cup of cola and it will come out clean x by lauren.conway
I can't see how. Pure citric acid is flammable but it is so weak an acid it is unlikely to create a bomb. Citric acid and baking soda would make a frothy mess but that is only likely to cause an explosion if you don't clean it up yourself.
Acid speeds up the rusting process of iron by providing hydrogen ions that react with iron to form iron ions, which then combine with oxygen to form iron oxide (rust). The presence of acid accelerates the formation of rust on the iron nail by increasing the rate of oxidation.
Fe + 2HCl --> FeCl2 + H2 You will get a salt, iron II chloride ( ferrous chloride ) and hydrogen gas you may see bubbling out of any solution your reactants are in.
it is in the ash tray. pull the ash tray all the way out and you will see the connection.