Acid base
I am guessing that you mean hydrochloric acid, and the reaction is ammonia plus hydrochloric acid gives ammonium chloride; NH3 + HCl => NH4Cl
Ammonia plus hydrochloric acid produces ammonium chloride. NH3 + HCl → NH4Cl
Exothermic reaction
No reaction.
Run
I am guessing that you mean hydrochloric acid, and the reaction is ammonia plus hydrochloric acid gives ammonium chloride; NH3 + HCl => NH4Cl
Ammonia plus hydrochloric acid produces ammonium chloride. NH3 + HCl → NH4Cl
Exothermic reaction
No reaction.
Run
trisodium phosphate plus hydrochloric acid plus oxygen.
Aluminum hydroxide plus hydrochloric acid equals( produces ) aluminum chloride plus water.
A simple reaction: nitric acid plus ammonia solution.
Magnesium hydroxide plus hydrochloric acid yields magnesium chloride plus water. Mg(OH)2 + 2HCl = MgCl2 + 2H2O
a balanced equation for the reaction of hydrochloric acid and ammonia solution is given below.HCL(aq) + NH3(l) ---> NH4+(aq) + Cl-(aq) complete .This is the balanced chemical equation .
A reaction between an Arrhenius base like NaOH or KOH, which leave behind hydroxide ions when they dissociate, and an acid, which leaves behind hydrogen atoms when it dissociates, will produce water. A Bronsted-Lowry base, which is any substance that accepts protons, doesn't necessarily do this. Ammonia plus hydrochloric acid equals ammonium chloride, not water...there's no way it could make water without stealing oxygen from the air because neither ammonia or hydrochloric acid have any oxygen of their own.
A word equation represent the reactions between metals and acids. The reaction for zinc and hydrochloric acid would be, zinc plus hydrochloric acid produces hydrogen plus zinc chloride.