Sodium hydroxide (strong base) and Sulphuric acid (strong acid)
The reactions of sodium hydroxide and calcium hydroxide with sulfuric acid will produce sodium sulfate and calcium sulfate respectively (water will be another product in both reactions. Sodium sulfate is soluble in water and so will remain in solution. Calcium sulfate, however, is insoluble and will precipitate as a solid.
Sulphuric acid reacts with sodium hydrogen carbonate to produce sodium sulfate, carbon dioxide, and water.
No. The sodium ion is neutral in terms of acidity. Elemental sodium reacts with water to form sodium hydroxide, which is a strong base.
The sodium will react violently with the sulfuric acid, releasing hydrogen gas which is then ignited by the heat of the reaction. The reaction will also produce sodium sulfate, sodium bisulfate, or a mixture of the two depending on how much acid there is relative to the amount of sodium.
Any strong base. Example, 2NaOH + H2SO4 -> Na2SO4 + 2H2O Sodium hydroxide plus sulfuric acid yields sodium sulfate, a salt, and water.
The reactions of sodium hydroxide and calcium hydroxide with sulfuric acid will produce sodium sulfate and calcium sulfate respectively (water will be another product in both reactions. Sodium sulfate is soluble in water and so will remain in solution. Calcium sulfate, however, is insoluble and will precipitate as a solid.
salicylic acid is the sublimate, the residue is the sodium sulfate
Sulphuric acid reacts with sodium hydrogen carbonate to produce sodium sulfate, carbon dioxide, and water.
Most acids will not react with sulfates as the sulfate ion (SO42-) is a very weak base. However, a strong acid will react with a sulfate ion tor form a bisulfate ion (HSO4-). Here is an example with hydrochloric acid and sodium sulfate. HCl + Na2SO4 --> NaCl + NaHSO4 The products are sodium chloride and sodium bisulfate.
No. The sodium ion is neutral in terms of acidity. Elemental sodium reacts with water to form sodium hydroxide, which is a strong base.
The sodium will react violently with the sulfuric acid, releasing hydrogen gas which is then ignited by the heat of the reaction. The reaction will also produce sodium sulfate, sodium bisulfate, or a mixture of the two depending on how much acid there is relative to the amount of sodium.
Any strong base. Example, 2NaOH + H2SO4 -> Na2SO4 + 2H2O Sodium hydroxide plus sulfuric acid yields sodium sulfate, a salt, and water.
No, sodium bisulfate (NaHSO4) cannot be prepared by mixing sodium sulfate (Na2SO4) with hydrochloric acid (HCl), because both sulfuric acid and hydrochloric acids are "strong" acids (the H+ will completely dissociate from the anion in solution). If there is enough sodium to bind to the sulfate ions (2 sodiums per sulfate), then the H+ ions will gladly let them do so. So, NaHSO4 must be produced from sulfuric acid (H2SO4). One method is adding just enough sodium hydroxide (NaOH) so that the number of sodium ions is equal to the number of sulfate ions: H2SO4 + NaOH ---> NaHSO4 + H2O The sodium will displace one of the hydrogens, but there's not enough to displace both.
base
base
Hydrogen sulfate would be an alternate name for sulfuric acid, H2SO4. It is a very strong acid.
nickel sulfate + sodium carbonate -> sodium sulfate + nickel carbonate