glass container
Nothing happens. Gold will not react with sulfuric acid.
You'd get dilute sulfuric acid. The temperature would go up (possibly a lot), since the dissociation of sulfuric acid in water is exothermic.
the hydrochloric acid will dissolve the container and the acid will turn from green to brown
red
Nothing, gold doesn't react with sulphuric acid
Nothing happens. Gold will not react with sulfuric acid.
You'd get dilute sulfuric acid. The temperature would go up (possibly a lot), since the dissociation of sulfuric acid in water is exothermic.
Sulfuric acid is added in pools to control the pH of the water; many specialists don't recommend the use of H2SO4.
Sulfuric acid neither burns or causes a fire.
the hydrochloric acid will dissolve the container and the acid will turn from green to brown
red
Nothing, gold doesn't react with sulphuric acid
Yes, Copper oxide does fizz when it reacts with Sulphuric Acid
The battery contains a mixture of distilled water and sulfuric acid.
Sulphuric acid may be stored in a hard plastic cane for a long time, for its disposal put it on porous soil or clay and cover it with the same.
Sulfate is a combination of oxygen and sulfur whereas sulfide is the negative ion of sulfur alone. Both are negative ions, anions.Both sulfur and oxygen are "hungry" for electrons. When they make a chemical bond it is to gain a share of electrons to put them into a more stable electron mode (or configuration). They each have six electrons in their outer energy level and they can also share electrons with each other. The sulfate ion that results is SO42- it allows both sulfur and oxygen to share enough electrons to have a stable electron configuration.Sulfur can also just gain two electrons to achieve a stable outer electron configuration, S2-. Compounds like H2S (rotten egg gas), hydrogen sulfide is a compound using sulfide.Na2SO4 , sodium sulfate or H2SO4 (sulfuric acid) are compounds using sulfate.P.S. the suffix '-ate' in chemistry indicates that there is oxygen present whereas '-ide' tells us that only the element alone is present in forming the ion.
Batteries contain no gas. They contain a mixture of 65% distilled water and 35% sulfuric acid.