NaOH+MgSO4 ------> Mg(OH)2+Na2SO4; a translucent colour appearance; a milky solution some people call milk of magnesia.
Sodium hydroxide and sodium sulfate don't actually react.
Yes. Sodium hydroxide will react with carbon dioxide to form sodium bicarbonate. NaOH + CO2 --> NaHCO3
Yes, they do react, to form Sodium sulfate and Water
Sodium hydroxide react with the glucose in the presence of oxygen and methylene blue.Glucose ix oxidized by oxygen to gluconic acid; gluconic acid react with sodium hydroxide to form sodium gluconate.Methylene blue is reduced to a colorless leuco-derivate.
The reactants are sodium and oxygen, which normally forms sodium oxide in air. The sodium metal disassociates water into hydroxide ions (OH) and hydrogen (H), and combines preferentially with the hydroxide to form sodium hydroxide. This is a highly exothermic reaction that can rapidly accelerate as the sodium melts.
Sodium chloride is the product of the reaction between sodium hydroxide and hydrogen chloride.
Sodium hydroxide and sodium sulfate don't actually react.
No Sodium hydroxide solution results -- not sodium chloride.
It will form sodium chloride and sulfur hydroxide
No. Water and sodium hydroxide will form a solution, but no reaction occurs.
Sodium doesn't dissolve in water, it reacts with water to form sodium hydroxide and hydrogen: sodium + water ----> sodium hydroxide + hydrogen
Metallic copper does not react with sodium hydroxide. But if sodium hydroxide is added into a solution of copper ions, it would form Copper(II) Hydroxide. It is a precipitate which is insoluble in water.
No. as rust is caused by the oxidation process of: O2+2H2O+4e = 4OH in sodium hydroxide the hydroxide is already present making it harder to form and therefore making rust harder to form. Sodium hydroxide is a rust inhibitor.
NaCL
Correct. Lye applies not completely to sodium hydroxide, but also to other strong alkali, like potassium hydroxide. Sodium hydroxide just happens to be the most common form of it.
Water reacts with carbon dioxide in the air to form small amounts of carbonic acid. In a sodium hydroxide solution, this reacts again to form sodium carbonate.
Hydrogen is a colourless gas at ordinary temperatures and pressures. It's also an element that combines with many other elements, for example, oxygen, to form water. The element sodium, a metal, can combine with hydrogen and oxygen to form sodium hydroxide. But other metals (and other things) form hydroxides too. Sodium hydroxide is NaOH where Na is sodium, O is oxygen and H is hydrogen. It's the OH part that's the hydroxide. In NH4OH, ammonium hydroxide, which is often used in dilute form for cleaning windows, that OH also stands for hydroxide. The OH is something that sticks together in many ways.