Any reaction occur.
Sodium chloride is formed when sodium hydroxide and hydrochloric acid react. This is a neutralization reaction where the sodium hydroxide (a base) and hydrochloric acid (an acid) combine to form a salt (sodium chloride) and water.
When hydrochloric acid is neutralized, it forms water (H2O) and a salt called sodium chloride (NaCl).
Sodium chloride = hydrochloric acid, HCl Calcium sulfate = sulfuric acid, H2SO4 Ammonium nitrate = nitric acid, HNO3
When sodium carbonate and hydrochloric acid react, sodium chloride (table salt) is formed along with carbon dioxide and water.
When carbonates react with hydrochloric acid, the salt produced is a metal chloride, carbon dioxide gas, and water. The specific metal chloride salt formed will depend on the metal cation in the carbonate compound.
A chloride salt, depends on what substance was used to neutralise the acid.
Gastric acid is the digestive fuild thats found in the stomach it is made up of hydrochloric acid and and large quantities of potassium chloride (KCl) and sodium chloride(NaCl).
There is no reaction. "Hydroxide acid" is water, which does not react with sodium hydroxide.
Sodium chloride is formed from sodium and chlorine.
Chlorides. If it's the potassium salt, KCl, potassium chloride. NaCl sodium chloride etc.
You neutralize it with hydrochloric acid to make water and sodium chloride. But, of course, the salt made by this reaction cannot be consumed, as trace amounts of both the acid and base is still in the solution and ingesting them along with the salt has nasty consequences.
An acid is made acidic by a high concentration of positively charged hydrogen ions, and a base made basic by a high concentration of negatively charged hydroxide ions. When hydrochloric acid is mixed with sodium hydroxide, the hydrogen from the acid combines with the oxygen and hydrogen from base creating H2O (water). The leftover ions from the acid and base combine to from a salt, in this case, table salt (NaCl).