There is no reaction. Silver is less reactive than hydrogen, so it cannot replace the hydrogen in sulfuric acid. Ag(s) + H2SO4(aq) --> no reaction
A reactivity series is used to determine the reactivity of an element (mostly metals). Any element above another element can replace any element below it in the list.
http://www.frankswebspace.org.uk/ScienceAndMaths/chemistry/reactivitySeries.htm
The reaction between sulfuric acid (H2SO4) and zinc oxide (ZnO) forms zinc sulfate (ZnSO4) and water (H2O) as products.
When sulfuric acid reacts with silver, it will produce silver sulfate and hydrogen gas. The balanced chemical equation for this reaction is: 2Ag + H2SO4 -> Ag2SO4 + H2. Silver sulfate is a white precipitate that forms in the reaction.
The word equation for silver plus hydrochloric acid is silver + hydrochloric acid → silver chloride + hydrogen gas.
2caoh + 2h2so4_2caso4 + 3h2o the equation is balance
SO4H2 + 2Cu --> SO2 + 2CuOH
MgCO3 + H2SO4 --> MgSO4 + CO2 + H2O
Ba + H2SO4 ---> BaSO4 + H2
This equation is:Mg + H2SO4 = MgSO4 + H2
Mg + H2SO4 = MgSO4 + H2
Al + H2so4= AlSo2 + H2o
Mg+ H2SO4 ---> MgSO4+ H2. So, in words:Magnesium+Sulphuric Acid---> Magnesium Sulphate+ HydrogenMagnesium Sulphate and Hydrogen is your answer
The equation for the reaction between silver nitrate (AG) and hydrochloric acid (HCl) is: AgNO3 + HCl → AgCl + HNO3. This reaction forms silver chloride (AgCl) and nitric acid (HNO3) as products.