No. Where would the carbon in the carbon dioxide come from?
Carbon dioxide wille be evolved in both cases. With hydrochloric acid, sodium chloride is formed; with nitric acid, sodium nitrate is formed
Hydrogen gas is evolved when acids act on certain metals. For example, when hydrochloric acid acts on sodium, sodium chloride is formed as hydrogen gas escapes.
carbon dioxide carbon dioxide
No, a hydrochloric acid solution will produce H+ and Cl- ions. There is no carbon dioxide or oxygen involved.
The balanced word equation for copper carbonate and hydrochloric acid is: Copper Carbon Dioxide + hydrosulphate - coppersulphate + water + carbon dioxide
In the laboratory, carbon dioxide is usually prepared by the action of dilute hydrochloric acid on marble chips.
carbon dioxide
Carbon dioxide.
carbon dioxide
You get carbon dioxide.
The evolved gas is carbon dioxide (CO2).
1 mole of sodium carbonate + 2 moles of Hydrochloric acid would produce 1 mole of Carbon Dioxide which would occupy 22.4 liters at standard temperature and pressure