It will fizz up and overflow with lots of bubbles.
It produces Sodium hydroxide and Hydrogen
They react, producing sodium chloride, carbon dioxide, and water.
Nowhere. I assume you are talking about mixing solutions. The sodium ions and sulpahate ions remain in solution.
hydrochloric acid
No, because calcium is a less reactive metal than sodium, therefore the calcium will not replace/displace the sodium from the sodium hydroxide. There will be no reaction.
For example, Take Sodium and carbon = Sodium carbonate Na C = Na2C 1 2 There is a formula for each element or compound. Hope I helped you.
It is a chemical change, as sodium cannot evaporate (or water go to water vapor) without added heat. The main gas produced in this highly exothermic chemical reaction is hydrogen, liberated from the water by the combination of a hydroxide radical (OH) with the sodium, yielding a sodium hydroxide (NaOH) solution. The heat released is typically sufficient to ignite and burn both the sodium and the released hydrogen. So pure sodium metal oddly appears to catch fire and burn when placed in water.
Anything; ENO contain sodium bicarbonate.
Hydrochloric Acid with Pepsin this is the only acid that the body makes.
Yes. Pure sodium is highly flammable and a sodium fire cannot be put out with water or carbon dioxide like most fires. Sodium reacts violently with water, often catching fire and exploding. This reaction produces sodium hydroxide, a strong and caustic base.
sodium comes out of rocks and mixes in with the water
sodium comes out of rocks and mixes in with the water