Want this question answered?
HCL is an acid.Concentrated hydrochloric acid (fuming hydrochloric acid) forms acidic mists. Both the mist and the solution have a corrosive effect on human tissue, with the potential to damage respiratory organs, eyes, skin, and intestines. Upon mixing hydrochloric acid with common oxidation chemicals, such as sodium hypochlorite (bleach, NaClO) or Potassium permanganate (KMnO4), the toxic gas chlorine is produced.NaClO + 2 HCl → H2O + NaCl + Cl22 KMnO4 + 16 HCl → 2 MnCl2 + 8 H2O + 2 KCl + 5 Cl2Personal protective equipment such as rubber or PVC gloves, protective eye goggles, and chemical-resistant clothing and shoes are used to minimize risks when handling hydrochloric acid.In short:It's irritative and corrosive.
Hydrochloric acid reacts strongly with almost all metals, especially the softer ones like aluminum and magnesium. Hydrochloric acid is extremely irritating to skin and eyes. It can produce toxic gasses during certain reactions. HCl will produce heat when mixed with water and under certain circumstances can cause dangerous amounts of heat which lead to release of flammable gasses and splashing of hazardous acidic material. HCl will corrode electrical conductors. HCl can damage some types of containment vessels. HCl is strong enough to break down the portlandite in cement and concrete and thereby weaken otherwise strong secondary containment.
NaOH
Simper answer is yes, it's very soluble in 2 to 3 Molar HCl. Source: I am a chemical engineer working with CuCl and HCl.
33.3 ml of 3.0 M HCl should be filled up and mixed with water up to 100.0 ml of a 1.0 M HCl solution.
HCL is an acid.Concentrated hydrochloric acid (fuming hydrochloric acid) forms acidic mists. Both the mist and the solution have a corrosive effect on human tissue, with the potential to damage respiratory organs, eyes, skin, and intestines. Upon mixing hydrochloric acid with common oxidation chemicals, such as sodium hypochlorite (bleach, NaClO) or Potassium permanganate (KMnO4), the toxic gas chlorine is produced.NaClO + 2 HCl → H2O + NaCl + Cl22 KMnO4 + 16 HCl → 2 MnCl2 + 8 H2O + 2 KCl + 5 Cl2Personal protective equipment such as rubber or PVC gloves, protective eye goggles, and chemical-resistant clothing and shoes are used to minimize risks when handling hydrochloric acid.In short:It's irritative and corrosive.
Hydrochloric acid reacts strongly with almost all metals, especially the softer ones like aluminum and magnesium. Hydrochloric acid is extremely irritating to skin and eyes. It can produce toxic gasses during certain reactions. HCl will produce heat when mixed with water and under certain circumstances can cause dangerous amounts of heat which lead to release of flammable gasses and splashing of hazardous acidic material. HCl will corrode electrical conductors. HCl can damage some types of containment vessels. HCl is strong enough to break down the portlandite in cement and concrete and thereby weaken otherwise strong secondary containment.
NaOH
Simper answer is yes, it's very soluble in 2 to 3 Molar HCl. Source: I am a chemical engineer working with CuCl and HCl.
madhri chod bhosri wala
One
You should not take a 7 month old minoctcline HCL since there is a high chance that it is expired.
33.3 ml of 3.0 M HCl should be filled up and mixed with water up to 100.0 ml of a 1.0 M HCl solution.
Dissolve 0.01 mole 1) methformin, C4H11N5 in some milllilitrers dilute HCl and when dissolved add up to 10 ml.1) Be aware that methformin is only soluble as hydrochloric salt ( C4H11N5.HCl ).So you should correct for the real molacular mass: 129.164 g/mol (C4H11N5) compared to 165.63 g/mol for C4H11N5.HCl if you are weighting the salt in stead of the pure methformin.
i have hcl notebook k21pdc and have all drivers but my audio driver is not working could u suggest me what to do to resolve this problem
take the Mr of HCl to be 36.46. to prepare 1.0M we should take 36.46g and dilute to a litre to prepare 0.10M we should take 3.646g and dilute to a litre From density =mass/volume, we get volume=mass/density. So ideally we should take that volume and dilute to a litre. However we know that most conc HCl solution are not 100% HCl. thus we must multiply that volume by a factor 100/x for an HCl solution labelled x% Tauya Chigayo
Check the HCL