Want this question answered?
If the acid is sufficiently strong, carbon dioxide gas will evolve and a calcium salt of the acid will be formed.
Yes. Chalk is calcium carbonate. When an acid is added, carbon dioxide gas is produced.
If the acid is hydrochloric acid, then the gas is hydrogen.
Nickel forms Hydrogen gas when reacts with dilute acid.
No gas. Acid + base --> salt + water only
If the acid is sufficiently strong, carbon dioxide gas will evolve and a calcium salt of the acid will be formed.
Add chalk (Calcium carbonate) if it is an acid the chalk will 'fizz' as it reacts and it will give off carbon dioxide gas. Or just use a universal indicator solution or test with litmus paper.
Yes. Chalk is calcium carbonate. When an acid is added, carbon dioxide gas is produced.
If the acid is hydrochloric acid, then the gas is hydrogen.
Nickel forms Hydrogen gas when reacts with dilute acid.
When an acid reacts with a metal it produces a salt and hydrogen gas.
When limestone reacts with acid, Carbon Dioxide is produced.
No gas. Acid + base --> salt + water only
The name of the gas made when hydrogen carbonate reacts with acetic acid is carbon dioxide.
A metal (below hydrogen in E.C.S.) as Zinc reacts with dilute sulphuric acid and produces hydrogen gas.
When an acid reacts with a material, the hydrogen in the acid is released.
hydrogen gas