Most likely lithium since it has a the highest ionization energy than the others.
Lithium
Lithium
Bleaches mostly contain chlorine which on reaction with water form hydrochloric acid, alkali is used to neutralized the solution.
Many elements have this property, including all the alkali metals and the heavier alkaline earth metals. Also, many compounds such as sulfuric acid have exothermic heats of solution, but solution is not technically a "reaction."
Alkali metals or strong bases are not used; antacids contain aluminium or magnesium hydroxides, sodium bicarbonate etc.
It is probably the neutralisation of the detergent, an alkali, and water, although the pH of water is 7. Neutralisation is an exothermic reaction, which means heat is produced, therefore detergent gets hot when wet.
Chlorine will readily accept one electron to its outershell.
Exothermic Chemical Reactions · mixing sodium and chlorine to yield table salt · Respiration; combustion of fuels; and neutralization reactions between acids and alkali's
Yes. the reaction is exothermic and quite violent.
exothermic reactions1) Combustion: A combustion reaction is when oxygen combines with another compound to form water and carbon dioxide. These reactions are exothermic, meaning they produce heat. An example of this kind of reaction is the burning of napthalene:C10H8 + 12 O2---> 10 CO2 + 4 H2O
Bleaches mostly contain chlorine which on reaction with water form hydrochloric acid, alkali is used to neutralized the solution.
When they are reacted, a base and hydrogen gas is produced. This reaction is exothermic.
Because it is an exothermic reaction, meaning that heat is given off, and so the temperature of the solution decreases.
When an alkali (base) is added to vinegar, the acetic acid in the vinegar reacts with the alkali. These reactions are nearly all exothermic, that is, they generate heat as the chemical reaction proceeds. This is observed by a change in the temperature of the aqueous solution and the surrounding air.
No; chlorine is a nonmetal and a halogen.
To neutralise an acid you add the equivalent amount of base/ alkali. And for a base/ alkali you add an acid. The reaction that takes place is exothermic, when the temperature stops rising and starts to decrease you know the neutralisation has taken place.
Many elements have this property, including all the alkali metals and the heavier alkaline earth metals. Also, many compounds such as sulfuric acid have exothermic heats of solution, but solution is not technically a "reaction."
No gas is produced in the reaction of an acid and an alkali. In a neutralisation reaction, acid + alkali -> salt + water
Quite harmful. It is both a strong alkali (lye) which can cause tissue damage and change the pH of water bodies and can produce an exothermic reaction in excess of 400° F.