The acid will react with the carbonate minerals, releasing CO2 gas, the minerals will "fizz".
Calcium chloride would be formed and there would be water and carbon dioxide formed Hope this helped, if it does please recommend me it would be much appreciated
Marble chips are calcium carbonate. If the hydrochloric acid is strong(concentrated), it acts upon the marble and corrodes it liberating
carbonate reactions when heated
Sodium carbonate would be deposited at the bottom of the solution.
Marble is made out of mostly carbonates. When any acid, including hydrochloric acid, is added to a carbonate, carbon dioxide will form. The acid may bubble as the reaction takes place, and some or all of the marble will be destroyed.
Calcium chloride would be formed and there would be water and carbon dioxide formed Hope this helped, if it does please recommend me it would be much appreciated
If you put cold dilute Hydrochloric acid on a carbonate rock the acid dissolves the rock and you get bubbles of carbon dioxide in the acid. This reaction will only happen with carbonate rocks.
Marble chips are calcium carbonate. If the hydrochloric acid is strong(concentrated), it acts upon the marble and corrodes it liberating
The acide would react with the calcium carbonate, dissolving and eating it away.
carbonate reactions when heated
Calcium carbonate precipitates
Lithium carbonate is thermally decomposed by heating.
Any chemical reaction between these compounds.
Sodium carbonate would be deposited at the bottom of the solution.
Magnesium carbonate - MgCO3 - a white precipitate is formed.
Marble is made out of mostly carbonates. When any acid, including hydrochloric acid, is added to a carbonate, carbon dioxide will form. The acid may bubble as the reaction takes place, and some or all of the marble will be destroyed.
if you put aluminum foil on hydrochloric acid it can flow joke! hehe