Yes very well it produces calcium chloride, carbon dioxide, and water.
The reaction is CaCO3 + 2HCl --> H2O + CO2 + CaCl2
This occurs because the carbonate ion pulls hydrogen ions away from the hydrochloric acid, forming carbonic acid which is unstable and spontaneously decomposes into water and carbon dioxide
REACTION OF HYDROCHLORIC ACID WITH CALCIUM CORBONATE
When hydrochloric acid react with calcium corbonate calcium chloride and hydrogen bycorbonate is formed.
REACTION
HCL+CACO3 CACL2+H(CO3)2
It forms calcium chloride + water + carbon dioxide.
The observation would however be dissolution of the solid calcium chloride and effervescence (which could be accounted by the evolution of CO2 gas).
calcium chloride+water+carbondioxide
magnesium carbonate + hydrochloric acid
Yes, it does.
Calcium Hydroxide (Alkali in the stomach) and Gastric Acid (in the stomach)
For example calcium carbonate react with hydrochloric acid and form a solution.
Calcium chloride solution is neutral.
The best way to answer this question is with an example. Using Calcium oxide reacting with hydrochloric acid, the reaction formula is: CaO + 2HCl ----->CaCl2 + H2O The molecular weight for Calcium Oxide is 56, for Hydrochloric acid is 26.5 and for calcium chloride 110. If you start with only 56g of Calcium oxide but say 10000g of hydrochloric acid, the maximum yield of the product calcium chloride can only ever be 110g. It does not matter how much hydrochloric acid is added. The limiting reactant in this example is the calcium oxide.
The elements that do not react with dilute hydrochloric acid are those in the activity series below H. Those above H will react with it.
Calcium can react with hydrochloric acid. The products formed are calcium chloride and hydrogen gas.
Calcium reacts with hydrochloric acid to produce Calcium chloride and hydrogen gas.Ca +2 HCl -----> CaCl2 + H2
Yes. When most metals react with dilute hydrochloric acid, metal chloride and hydrogen gas are the products. In the case of calcium, calcium chloride and hydrogen gas are produced.
Calcium is already neutral, so "neutralized" isn't the right word. It would react with hydrochloric acid to form hydrogen gas and calcium chloride.
Calcium Hydroxide (Alkali in the stomach) and Gastric Acid (in the stomach)
Silver does not react with hydrochloric acid.
They fizz up and produce a gas. Plus form a compound.
Calcium Hydroxide + Hydrochloric acid = Calcium chloride + Water
Examples: hydrochloric acid, nitric acid, acetic acid, etc.
2Ca+4HCl->2CaCl2+2H2 or more simply... Ca + HCl -> CaCl2 + H2
Gold react with aqua regia not with hydrochloric acid.
i am asking the same thing