A solution of sodium thiosulfate is produced.
It may or may not...if there is some acid in the solution, then sulfur is a byproduct of the equation, which will lead to a sulfur smell. However, I don't feel like it would cause the smell, without at least a catalytic amount of acid.
A solution
It give out heat (exothermic) and you get yourselves solution of sodium sulfate salt and water.
huG A panda
58.9g
when their solution are mixed iron carbonate solid and solution of sodium sulphate is produced..
It may or may not...if there is some acid in the solution, then sulfur is a byproduct of the equation, which will lead to a sulfur smell. However, I don't feel like it would cause the smell, without at least a catalytic amount of acid.
When water is mixed with sodium thiosulfate the surrounding area temperature decreases causing the temperature to become, colder. for example; the water is at 22.5 C when you mix it with sodium thiosulfate the temperature could decrease up to 19.5 C this is because sodium thiosulfate an endothermic reaction which makes new bonds with the water and the sodium thiosulfate
It is still sodium. Adding water just makes it a sodium solution, but does not form a new compound
A solution
jj
No
Because two compounds - sodium chloride and water - are mixed.
MgCl2 + Na2CO3 = 2NaCl + MgCO3
Macaroni
Sodium Chloride is neutral. And Phenolphthalein is colourless when neutral.
Sodium - Na. When silver nitrate is mixed with Sodium Hydroxide, Sodium Iodide, Sodium Phosphate a precipitate forms.