A carbonate is a basic compound and will neutralise an acid when mixed together. For example, Calcium Carbonate (marble/limestone) with Sulphuric acid gives carbon dioxide, water and calcium sulphate; CaCO3 + H2SO4 --> CaSO4 + H2O + CO2 Reaction of calcium carbonate with hydrochloric acid gives calcium chloride, carbon dioxide and water; CaCO3 + 2HCl --> CaCl2 + CO2 + H2O Some of the carbon dioxide can become dissolved in the solution and react with water to produce carbonic acid although most will disperse as a gas; CO2 + H2O --> H2CO3
carbon dioxed is what is produced
Carbon Dioxide
This question cannot be answered because if you neutralise citric acid you will get a citrate, not a nitrate. To get potassium nitrate you will need the alkali potassium hydroxide and nitric acid.
akshay
CO2 (carbon dioxide) gas is produced during the krebs/citric acid cycle
Sodium citrate and carbon dioxide.
acid streaic +k carbonate
No, potassium chloride has nothing to do with citric acid.
This question cannot be answered because if you neutralise citric acid you will get a citrate, not a nitrate. To get potassium nitrate you will need the alkali potassium hydroxide and nitric acid.
akshay
CO2 (carbon dioxide) gas is produced during the krebs/citric acid cycle
any carbonate salt as CaCO3....
Sodium citrate and carbon dioxide.
Any acid (stronger than carbonic -, but use only diluted for safety!)(e.g. citric, lactic or gluconic acid)will do the trick with any carbonate or hydrogen carbonate(e.g. calcium, magnesium, potassium, ammonium or ferric).
K2CO3 + 2HNO3 = 2KNO3 (potassium nitrate) + H2O + CO2 and it's nitric acid
acid streaic +k carbonate
Chuck Norris
total ionic equation (also known as the complete ionic equation) for the reaction of potassium carbonate with hydrochloric acid
Andrews salts contain magnesium sulphate, sodium hydrogen carbonate and citric acid