calcium carbonate
Silver carbonate is not soluble in water; any reaction with sodium chloride.
Is that possible maybe its meant tot be sodium carnonate and hydrochloric acid? that would make sodium chloride- salt, water and carbon dioxide the gas
First of all, since Magnesium Carbonate is not Soluble in water you couldn't have a solution of these two salts in water. But if you had a mixture of the two in powdered form and need to separate them simply dissolve what you can in water, the part that wont dissolve is the magnesium carbonate and you could them filter it out and let the solution of sodium carbonate dry out and there you have the two separated.
Mix dilute hydrochloric acid with calcium carbonate to obtain a calcium chloride solution; then add sodium sulphate solution to the calcium chloride solution to obtain calcium sulphate precipitate.
CaCl2+CO2 Calcium Chloride+Carbon Dioxide
It makes calcium chloride,water and carbon dioxide
calcium carbonate, hydrochloric acid CaCO3 + 2 HCL = CaCl2 + H2O
It will make the water cloudy. to remove calcium carbonate simply lower pH in the pool to 7.0 or lower and calcium carbonate will redissolve back into suspension and water will clear up. You can get this characteristic by adding sodium Carbonate too quickly.
calcium carbonate :)
CaCO3 + 2HCl -> CaCl2 + CO2 + H2O
Sodium chloride = hydrochloric acid, HCl Calcium sulfate = sulfuric acid, H2SO4 Ammonium nitrate = nitric acid, HNO3
They are named from the acids: sodium chloride, sodium carbonate, sodium sulfate, sodium phosphate, sodium citrate, sodium oxalate, sodium fluoride etc.