carbon dioxide
HCl+NaOH, when mixed in equimolar amounts, produces a neutral solution of NaCl.
Salt plus Water. In this case the salt would be Sodium Sulphate.
The compound HCl NaOH H2O is a mixture of hydrochloric acid (HCl) and sodium hydroxide (NaOH) in water (H2O). When mixed, HCl and NaOH neutralize each other to produce water and salt - in this case, sodium chloride (NaCl). So, technically, it is not a salt but a mixture that can produce salt under certain conditions.
2H - C - H + NaOH ------> H- C - O -Na + CH3 - OH
When an acid and a base are mixed together, they neutralize each other to form water and a salt. The reaction between an acid and a base is known as a neutralization reaction. The salt formed depends on the specific acid and base that are mixed.
NaOH is a base.
It will give a salt and water, so if it is HCl and NaOH it will give you NaCl and H2O
No, the reaction between NaOH and HCl is a neutralization reaction, not a double replacement reaction. In a neutralization reaction, an acid and a base react to form a salt and water. The products are NaCl (salt) and H2O (water).
The reaction between hydrochloric acid (HCl) and sodium hydroxide (NaOH) is a neutralization reaction, where an acid and a base react to form a salt (NaCl) and water (H2O). This reaction involves the transfer of a proton from the acid to the base to form the salt and water.
It is a salt but it is also a strong base.
An acid-base reaction
The reaction between HCl and NaOH produces water and sodium chloride (NaCl), which is also known as table salt. This is a neutralization reaction where the strong acid (HCl) reacts with the strong base (NaOH) to form a salt and water.