Carbon dioxide gas is involved in the reaction between sodium trioxocarbonate IV and dilute hydrochloric acid
There will be an strong exothermic reaction which will flame and sputter.
Neutralization reaction occurs.
that would be a acid-metal oxide reaction see related link for more info
trisodium phosphate plus hydrochloric acid plus oxygen.
it makes the acid less corrosive
No, it is a single displacement reaction. It can also be called a redox reaction. It is not an acid base reaction because although hydrochloric acid is obviously and acid, magnesium is a metal, not a base.
alkaline
basic
There will be an strong exothermic reaction which will flame and sputter.
The reaction is:HCl + NaOH = NaCl + H2O
It could stop because there wasn't enough magnesium or hydrochloric acid for the reaction to go to completion.
sheet
chlorination
The reaction is: Zn + 2 HCl = ZnCl2 + H2
This reaction is exothermic.
Yes, when magnesium reacts with hydrochloric acid it is a single replacement reaction. The same is true for nearly all cases of a reaction between an acid and a metal.
Neutralization