lewis tang
lithium carbonate + hydrochloric acid ---> lithium chloride + carbon dioxide + water
Li2CO3 + 2HCl --> 2LiCl + CO2 + H2O The gas formed would be carbon dioxide.
Lithium Chloride
Lithium chloride is produced by treatment of lithium carbonate with hydrochloric acid. It can in principle also be generated by the highly exothermic reaction of lithium metal with either chlorine or anhydrous hydrogen chloride gas
lithium carbonate + sulfuric acid = lituim sulfate + water + carbon dioxide
lithium carbonate + hydrochloric acid ---> lithium chloride + carbon dioxide + water
No, it is ionic.
Li2CO3
Li2CO3 + 2HCl --> 2LiCl + CO2 + H2O The gas formed would be carbon dioxide.
Lithium Chloride
It depends. It is most likely potassium chloride and lithium carbonate
Lithium chloride is produced by treatment of lithium carbonate with hydrochloric acid. It can in principle also be generated by the highly exothermic reaction of lithium metal with either chlorine or anhydrous hydrogen chloride gas
lithium carbonate + sulfuric acid = lituim sulfate + water + carbon dioxide
Li2CO3 = Li2O + CO2
Lithium + Chlorine ---> Lithium Chloride + Hydrogen L2 + Cl2 ---> 2LiCl + H2
I think that there is no reaction, both of them are soluble. so they stay as the ions and cations in aqueous.
The balanced equation for Lithium carbonate plus Nitric Acid is: LiCO3 + 2HNO3 --> Li(NO3)2 + CO2 + H2O