Both hydroxide and carbonate are relatively strong bases. They would not react with each other.
Calcium carbonate.
Citric acid plus sodium carbonate will produce carbon dioxide gas, water, and sodium citrate.
that means the silver nitrate reacted with the sodium hyroxide solution and sodium hydroxide and silver oxide was produced. this is called a double replacement reaction.
assuming you mean sodium plus iron II carbonate, the products are iron plus sodium carbonate. iron is a transitional metal which can make +2 or +3 ions, and YOU need to state that in your word equation. there no such thing as iron carbonate, but there is such thing as iron II carbonate and iron III carbonate
Glass
Sodium Hydrogen Carbonate plus Nitric acid = Sodium Nitrate + Hydrogen + Co2
When sodium carbonate reacts with calcium chloride, it forms calcium carbonate and sodium chloride. This is a double displacement reaction where the cations and anions of the two compounds switch partners.
Sodium carbonate plus hydrochloric acid gives sodium chloride plus water plus carbon dioxide.
No, but maybe the question was wrongly interpretable.Better answering, according to this one:Q.:Sodium hydrogen carbonate reacts TO FORM sodium carbonate plus water plus carbon dioxide?A.:Yes, this will happen on (dry) heating or also in solution at higher temperatures!2 NaHCO3 --> Na2CO3 + H2O + (CO2)gas
When magnesium sulfate (MgSO4) reacts with sodium carbonate (Na2CO3), it forms magnesium carbonate (MgCO3) and sodium sulfate (Na2SO4) as products. This reaction is represented by the chemical equation: MgSO4 + Na2CO3 → MgCO3 + Na2SO4.
When sodium carbonate (Na2CO3) decomposes, it forms sodium oxide (Na2O) and carbon dioxide (CO2) gas as byproducts.
Na + 2S --> Na2S Sodium and Sulphur yield Sodium Sulphide.