"Vitamin C" is a somewhat ambiguous term, chemically speaking; it can refer either to ascorbic acid or one of its salts such as sodium ascorbate. If you mix sodium hydrogen carbonate with ascorbic acid, you get sodium ascorbate, water, and carbon dioxide. If you mix sodium hydrogen carbonate with sodium ascorbate, they just mix; there's no chemical reaction.
Vitamin C is sensitive for temperature and sodium hydrogen carbonate. When heated for a very long time, the amount of vitamin C will decrease. When heated at a constant temperature with a concentration of sodium hydrogen carbonate, more vitamin C will be lost.
The word equation for sodium hydrogen carbonate when heated is: sodium hydrogen carbonate (sodium bicarbonate) → sodium carbonate + carbon dioxide + water.
Yes: hydrogen carbonate is a stronger acid, and therefore a weaker base, than carbonate.
NaHCO3, sodium hydrogen carbonate, or sodium bicarbonate, or baking soda, contains the positively charged sodium ion, Na+, and the negatively charged hydrogen carbonate ion, or bicarbonate ion, HCO3-.
2NaHCO3 ---> Na2CO3 + H2O + Co2 if this isn't right, then i have failed my exams
Vitamin C is sensitive for temperature and sodium hydrogen carbonate. When heated for a very long time, the amount of vitamin C will decrease. When heated at a constant temperature with a concentration of sodium hydrogen carbonate, more vitamin C will be lost.
The word equation for sodium hydrogen carbonate when heated is: sodium hydrogen carbonate (sodium bicarbonate) → sodium carbonate + carbon dioxide + water.
Yes: hydrogen carbonate is a stronger acid, and therefore a weaker base, than carbonate.
Sodium hydrogen carbonate is baking powder.
NaHCO3, sodium hydrogen carbonate, or sodium bicarbonate, or baking soda, contains the positively charged sodium ion, Na+, and the negatively charged hydrogen carbonate ion, or bicarbonate ion, HCO3-.
The chemical formula of sodium hydrogen carbonate is NaHCO3.Sodium hydrogen carbonate is an ionic compound.
no
2NaHCO3 ---> Na2CO3 + H2O + Co2 if this isn't right, then i have failed my exams
Yes. Sodium hydrogen carbonate, more commonly called sodium bicarbonate, is a compound of sodium, hydrogen, carbon, and oxygen.
The common name for sodium hydrogen carbonate (NaHCO3) is baking soda.
When sodium hydrogen carbonate reacts with sodium carbonate, it will undergo a double displacement reaction forming sodium bicarbonate and sodium carbonate. The chemical equation is: NaHCO3 + Na2CO3 -> 2NaHCO3.
No, sodium hydrogen carbonate is a compound. If a substance has more than one element mentioned in its name (this one has three) it is not an element.