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The lime water goes cloudy.
If u add water to lime it will be lime water which is base thus when acid reacts with base then that will be "neutralization reaction". And formation of salt and water will take place. It will be exothermic in nature.
Any reaction occur.
Lime water goes cloudy when a reaction takes place with carbon dioxide. Lime water detects the presence of lime water.
Lime water is used in an experiment to test if carbon dioxide is produced from acid reacting with a marble chip. If you see a calcium carbonate in your lime water at the end of the reaction, you will know that it produced the gas, carbon dioxide.
When acids react with carbonates, carbon dioxide is produced. You can test this by waiting for the chemical reaction to take place and then using a bung to insert the gas into lime water!
The most common lime water reaction is with carbon dioxide, denoted by the equation: Ca(OH)2 (aq) + CO2 (g) → CaCO3 (s) + H2O (l) Since this is not a redox reaction (no oxidation numbers change), lime water is not an oxidizer.
A chemical change. CaSO3 is insolube in water.
When acids react with carbonates, carbon dioxide is produced. You can test this by waiting for the chemical reaction to take place and then using a bung to insert the gas into lime water!
yes
When acids react with carbonates, carbon dioxide is produced. You can test this by waiting for the chemical reaction to take place and then using a bung to insert the gas into lime water!
Lime water absorbs the carbon dioxide gas produced during the reaction
Lime is considered to be calcium oxide which is a base. The lime will neutralize acids that form a salt and water. Calcium oxide plus hydrochloric acid equals calcium chloride plus water.
it happened cause the time needed for the lime water to change was made less
water bubbles White precipitate
THE ANSWERLemon Lime has more acids!
The lime water goes cloudy.