This is the sulfuric acid - H2SO4.
Sulfuric acid can form salts by reacting with metals, metal oxides, metal hydroxides or metal carbonates. Some common salts produced from sulfuric acid include sulfates such as sodium sulfate (Na2SO4), copper sulfate (CuSO4) and zinc sulfate (ZnSO4).
A salt is a compound formed when the hydrogen of an acid is replaced by a metal. Hydrochloric acid produces chlorides such as sodium chloride. Nitric acid makes nitrates such as potassium nitrate. Sulfuric acid gives sulfates such as magnesium sulfate.
Nitric acid produces nitrates. Sulfuric acid produces sulfates. Hydrochloric acid produces chlorides. Phosphoric acid produces phosphates.
Sulfuric acid produces sulfates when it reacts with metals.
No, sulphate salts are very stable and can not be converted into acid.
Acids and bases neutralize each other. This is pretty obvious, as you probably know an acid donates H+ ions, while bases accepted them. An reaction between an acid and base would produce the salt of the two. Sulfuric acid produces sulfate salts, nitric acid produces nitrite salts, hydrochloric acid produces chloride salts, etc. The salt is not alkaline nor acidic, just neutral.
Potassium sulfate can be made by reacting potassium chloride with sulfuric acid. The reaction produces potassium sulfate and hydrochloric acid as byproduct. The potassium sulfate can then be extracted and purified.
Carbonate salts can be converted to sulfate salts through a double displacement reaction where the carbonate anion is exchanged with the sulfate anion. This reaction usually requires the addition of a sulfate-containing compound to the carbonate salt solution, leading to the formation of sulfate salts and a carbonate byproduct. The reaction can be represented by the general formula: (CO3)2- + SO4 2- → (SO4)2- + CO32-
Yes, sulfuric acid can be called hydrogen sulfate because it is an acid comprised of hydrogen ions and sulfate ions. The chemical formula for sulfuric acid is H2SO4, which indicates its composition of hydrogen and sulfate ions.
Chlorides are salts of the hydrochloric acid (HCl).
When Epsom salts (magnesium sulfate) are mixed with sulfuric acid (H2SO4), a reaction occurs where the magnesium sulfate is protonated by the sulfuric acid to form magnesium bisulfate and water. This reaction releases heat and should be handled carefully due to the corrosive nature of sulfuric acid.
Salts of strong acids and strong bases such as sodium chloride and calcium nitrate. One exception would be salts of sulfuric acid because the first conjugate base, the sulfate ion (HSO4-) is still a weak acid, and the second conjugate base, the sulfate ion (SO42-) is very mildly basic.