The acid may react which the metal to form a salt and release hydrogen gas.
Acids can react with metals.
That will depend not only on the metal but also on the acid. Some strong acids will dissolve almost all metals almost instantly, some weak acids will do nothing at all to any metal. Some metals (e.g. zinc) are corroded or even dissolved by most acids, some metals (e.g. gold) are totally unaffected except by certain mixtures of very strong acids.
Acids can react with metals to produce hydrogen gas, not oxygen. When acids react with metals, they displace hydrogen gas from the acid.
No. Metals liberate hydrogen gas from acids.
Yes it does. but not all metals.
Yes, acids are corrosive to metals because they can react with the metal surface, causing it to deteriorate or dissolve.
Metals react with acids to produce a salt and hydrogen gas.
All alkali metals and alkali earth metals below calcium react vigorously with acids.
Metals such as zinc, aluminum, and iron can react with acids but not with water. When these metals react with acids, they undergo a chemical reaction that produces hydrogen gas and a salt. In contrast, these metals do not react with water to produce hydrogen gas.
Most acids are sour and corrode metals.
Many metals reacts with acids forming salts.
Metal oxides are basic in nature and react with acids to form salts and water. Non-metal oxides are acidic in nature and react with bases to form salts and water. Metals generally react with acids to form salts and hydrogen gas.