2Na + 2H20 = 2NaOH + H2
When sodium is mixed with water, a chemical reaction takes place and new compounds are formed, namely sodium hydroxide and hydrogen gas. Sodium hydroxide is highly corrosive and hydrogen gas is extremely flammable. The chemical equation for such a reaction is as follows: Na + H2O -> NaOH + H
Dissolving is not a chemical reaction; any chemical equation.
The chemical equation is:3 NaOH + H3PO4 = Na3PO4 + 3 H2O
Yes, the water and sodium produce sodium hydroxide and hydrogen!
C6H13Na + H2O
When sodium is mixed with water, a chemical reaction takes place and new compounds are formed, namely sodium hydroxide and hydrogen gas. Sodium hydroxide is highly corrosive and hydrogen gas is extremely flammable. The chemical equation for such a reaction is as follows: Na + H2O -> NaOH + H
Dissolving is not a chemical reaction; any chemical equation.
The chemical equation is:3 NaOH + H3PO4 = Na3PO4 + 3 H2O
2Na+2H20->2Na0H+H2 ::::apex
Yes, the water and sodium produce sodium hydroxide and hydrogen!
C6H13Na + H2O
Lithium + water = lithium hydroxide + hydrogen Sodium + water = Sodium hydroxide + hydrogen Potassium + water = Potassium hydroxide + hydrogen
This equation can be written as NaOH (aq) + HCl (aq) -> NaCl (aq) + H2O if the reaction occurs in aqueous solution. The only actual chemical reaction is between the aquated hydroxide and hydrogen ions, the chloride and sodium ions being "spectators" only.
A chemical reaction occurs between sodium hydroxide and hydrogen chloride. Adding more sodium hydroxide to the reaction causes it to speed up. If you add more of a reactant, such as sodium hydroxide, can it be considered a catalyst? Why or why not?
Any reaction occur.
No equation, it is not a chemical reaction.
The reaction is:NaOH + HCl = NaCl + H2O