Sulfuric acid and table salt. Reacting them will produce hydrogen chloride (gas) and sodium sulfate by the Mannheim process (see link below):
2NaCl(s) + H2SO4(l) --> 2HCl(g) + Na2SO4(s)
Other reactions are possible--for instance, sodium bisulfate (NaHSO4(s)) can also be expected to be produced at lower temperatures than the Mannheim process requires.
Mixing aqueous solutions of NaCl and H2SO4 will yield no net reaction because the driver for the reaction is the liberation of free HCl gas. In the presence of excess water, the HCl that would have been liberated, instead, forms hydrochloric acid and remains ionized and in solution up to a concentration of around 37% at STP.
1. In an aqueos solution NaCl and H2SO4 dosn't react.
2. If sodium chloride is as a solid the products of the reaction are HCl gas and sodium sulfate.
Sodium chloride and sulfuric acid doesn't react.
Sodium chloride doesn't react with sulfuric acid.
Any reaction occur.
Heat is produced
The answer is: any reaction.
NaCl(s) + C2H5OH(l) --> NaOH(aq) + C2H5Cl(aq)
2NaCl + H2SO4 ----> 2HCl + Na2SO4 *molar mass of H2SO4 is 98.09g *molar mass of NaCl is 58.44g *molar mass HCl is is 36.46g Moles NaCl = 150 g / 58.44 = 2.56 The ratio between NaCl and H2SO4 is 2 : 1 so NaCl is the limiting reactant We would get 2.56 mol HCl => 2.56 mol x 36.46 g/mol = 93.3 g
Nothing happens. NaCl is virtually insoluble in acetone. Only 0.042 mg of NaCl will dissolve in 100 g of acetone at 25°C.
There is no reaction for this process.H2SO4 + NaCl => N.R.
NaCl H2SO4 KNO3 CaCl3
NaCl doesn't neutralize sulfuric acid.
NaCl and H2SO4 doesn't react.
There is reaction when more or less concentrated H2SO4 is used on NaCl(BE VERY CAREFULL, only in laboratory circumstances). HCl (gas!) is toxic and very dangerous.H2SO4 + NaCl --> HCl(gas) + Na2SO4
Calcium sulfate is formed along with the evolution of CO2 gas. H2SO4 + CaCO3 ---> CaSO4 + H2O + CO2
No, they are immiscible.