Word Equation: potassium carbonate + sulphuric acid = potassium sulphate + water + carbon dioxide
the balanced chemical equation is:
K2CO3 + H2SO4 = K2SO4 H2O + CO2
Dilute sulfuric acid and aqueous sodium carbonate not only produce water and salt but carbon dioxide too. Sodium carbonate + sulfuric acid → sodium sulfate + carbon dioxide + water
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2hcl- + k2co3====>2h2co3+2kcl
H+ +hco3 -> h2o + co2
2ki+ h2so4 ----> k2so4 + 2hi
Dilute sulfuric acid and aqueous sodium carbonate not only produce water and salt but carbon dioxide too. Sodium carbonate + sulfuric acid → sodium sulfate + carbon dioxide + water
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MgSO4+ H2O + CO2
H+ +hco3 -> h2o + co2
2hcl- + k2co3====>2h2co3+2kcl
2ki+ h2so4 ----> k2so4 + 2hi
When dilute sulfuric acid reacts with copper(II) carbonate, blue copper(II) sulfate solution is produced.
Concentrated sulfuric acid has sulfuric acid molecules where dilute sulfuric acid has sulfate ions and hydrogen ions. Water in the diluted solution acts as the ionization medium.
It depends on how diluted the dilute sulphuric acid is (i.e. its concentration).
No, although "concentrated" sulfuric acid (essentially pure H2SO4) is less dissociated than dilute sulfuric acid, simply because there's no water around for it to dissociate in.
Driving off the water from dilute sulfuric acid will increase the concentration of the acid to the point where it will contain virtually no water.
Dilute sulfuric acid is still acid. It is NOT basic at all.