Adding sulfuric acid to water is the recommended way of working to avoid accidents.
You'd get dilute sulfuric acid. The temperature would go up (possibly a lot), since the dissociation of sulfuric acid in water is exothermic.
Sulfuric acid is added in pools to control the pH of the water; many specialists don't recommend the use of H2SO4.
The solution gets hot
To make it a better conductor.
When lithium hydroxide pellets are added to a solution of sulfuric acid Lithium Sulfate and water are formed. The balanced equation is 2LiOH + H2SO4 ------> Li2SO4 + 2H2O
No, a sulfuric acid solution in water is homogeneous
In concentrated sulfuric acid usually about 1%
Sulfuric acid is added to sugar to make carbon
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.
Nothing.
The (N) stands for Normal. 1 Normal is 28 ml of concentrated sulfuric acid added to deionized water for a final volume of 1 Liter (L). 18 N is roughly a 50 percent concentration sulfuric acid.
Batteries contain sulfuric acid. Sulfuric acid is corrosive to metal.