If the acid is hydrochloric acid, HCl, then the products are the metal chloride and hydrogen gas. For example, if magnesium is dropped in hydrochloric acid, the products will be aqueous magnesium chloride and hydrogen gas.
depends on the acid, if its strong enough the metal will disintegrate
In a typical reaction the products are hydrogen gas and some sort of salt.
Dissolution with formation of a salt and the release of a gas.
The products in a reaction between an acid and a base are called salts.
Magnesium is the metal. Sulfuric acid is a compound.
The reaction between an acid and a metal is an example of a single-replacement reaction.
The products of neutralization reaction are water and a salt.
A neutralization reaction is a reaction between a base and an acid; the products are a salt and water.
A reaction between an acid and a metal oxide to form a salt and water as the only products.
The reaction between a metal and an acid isn't a neutralization reaction.The products are a salt and hydrogen.
Salts are the products of a neutralization reaction between a metal (or ammonium) hydroxide and an acid.
Generally, when an acid reacts with a metal carbonate, the products, the reaction products are: water, carbon dioxide, and a salt specific to the metal and the acid, e.g: hydrochloric acid + sodium carbonate → sodium chloride + carbon dioxide + water. 2HCl + Na2CO3 → 2NaCl + CO2 + H2O Generally, when an acid reacts with a metal hydroxide, the products, the reaction products are: water, and a salt specific to the metal and the hydroxide, e.g: Cupric hydroxide + hydrochloric acid → Cupric chloride + water Cu(OH)2 + 2HCl → CuCl2 + 2H2O
Common one. Zn + 2HCl --> ZnCl2 + H2 The salt, zinc chloride and the hydrogen gas products coming from the reaction of the zinc metal and hydrochloric acid.
The answer is during a metal reaction to acid, it makes salt and hydrogen. Another way is Acid + Metal > Metal Salt + Hydrogen
The products in a reaction between an acid and a base are called salts.
metal + acid >>> metal salt + hydrogen this is what i was taught anyway ;D
No, it is a single displacement reaction. It can also be called a redox reaction. It is not an acid base reaction because although hydrochloric acid is obviously and acid, magnesium is a metal, not a base.
Generally, there occurs a chemical reaction with a wearing away of the metal. A salt and Hydrogen gas are produced. The following is the general formula for this reaction: ACID + (Active) METAL --> SALT + HYDROGEN. If the metal is not active such as Gold, then this reaction does not occur.
I THINK the answer is Neutralization
that would be a acid-metal oxide reaction see related link for more info