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When carbonates react with acids, they produce carbon dioxide gas, water, and a salt.
Carbon dioxide can form carbonates when it react with a basic substance
Acids produce carbon dioxide gas when they react with carbonates. This is due to the acid breaking down the carbonate to form carbon dioxide, water, and a salt.
Both metal carbonates and metal hydrogen carbonates form carbon dioxide when mixed with acid.
As carbonates are mildly basic, anything acid will react with them (releasing carbon dioxide gas).
Acids react with carbonates or bicarbonates to produce carbon dioxide. The acid breaks down the carbonate or bicarbonate compound, releasing carbon dioxide gas as a byproduct. This reaction can be observed in effervescent tablets or antacids when they are dissolved in water.
Yes, it is the basic property of an acid to decompose the carbonates into carbon dioxide.
Carbon dioxide is produced when acids react with carbonates. This chemical reaction results in the formation of water, a salt, and carbon dioxide gas.
Sulfuric acid is not used to prepare carbon dioxide because it does not readily release carbon dioxide gas when it reacts with carbonates or carbon-containing substances. Instead, carbonates react with acids like hydrochloric acid or acetic acid to produce carbon dioxide gas.
Carbonates and carbon dioxide are considered inorganic despite containing carbon.
When a metal burns, it typically reacts with oxygen in the air to form metal oxides, rather than carbon dioxide. However, if the metal is part of a compound that contains carbon, such as hydrocarbons or certain metal carbonates, burning it can produce carbon dioxide as a byproduct. In general, pure metals do not produce carbon dioxide when they burn.
Carbon dioxide gas is given off when an acid reacts with carbonates. This reaction forms carbonic acid, which then decomposes to release carbon dioxide gas.