When a halocarbon reacts with a base, the products are an alcohol and salt.
When a halocarbon reacts with a base, the products produced are a salt and an alcohol. The base will deprotonate the hydrogen attached to the carbon atom that is bonded to the halogen, resulting in the formation of the salt. The halogen atom is replaced by a hydroxyl group, leading to the formation of an alcohol.
An Alkali is also a base. So, when reacted with an acid forms a salt and water as products
Water and a salt
Water and a salt
The products of a neutralization reaction are typically water and a salt. When an acid and a base react together, they neutralize each other, forming water and a salt as the final products. Additionally, heat is often produced during this reaction.
Probably it forms metallic salts.....
A salt is produced when an acid and a base react each other.
A neutralization reaction in aqueous medium produces a salt and water.
When equal amounts of an acid and a base react, they neutralize each other to form water and a salt.
salt and water are produced, usually with a release of heat.
That depends on what they react with. If an acid reacts with a metal the products are usually hydrogen gas and a salt. If one reacts with a base the products are usually water (or a weak acid) and a salt. If an acid reacts with a carbonate the products are carbon dioxide, water, and a salt.
Those two kinds of compounds do NOT react at all.