is soluble in water and will fizz when hydrochloric acid is added
it just has to do with the cemecals in it
Because seashells are made of Calcium Carbonate, which when reacted with acid produces carbon dioxide and water.
No, calcium chloride will dissolve in water.
Tablets fizz due to containing a carbonate like sodium bicarbonate that reacts with water. Once the water touches it, it reacts and release carbon dioxide in the form of fizz or bubbles.
My guess is that it would not "fizz" at all.The Fizz that one often sees when mixing calcium carbonate, sodium bicarbonate, etc with an acid is the releasing carbon dioxide CO2 from the Carbonate ion CO32-.Calcium Chloride is a salt. It will likely dissociate in the solution, but I doubt it will "fizz".If you mix Hydrochloric Acid with Calcium Carbonate you get:2HCl + CaCO3 --> CaCl2 + H2CO3 --> CaCl2 + H2O + CO2Where the Calcium Chloride is more likely kept in solution as Ca2+ + 2Cl-
Calcite, which is the compound calcium carbonate (CaCO3) forms carbonic acid (H2CO3) which decomposes into water and carbon dioxide gas.
Carbon dioxide gas puts the fizz in soda water.
is soluble in water and will fizz when hydrochloric acid is added
Regular water from the tap does not fizz because it is not carbonated. You can purchase carbonated water from the grocery store, which fizzes like soda.
They fizz up and produce a gas. Plus form a compound.
Carbonation.
No. The fizz in any soft drink is made by carbonated water.
carbonation!!!!!!!!!!
kj
fizz
Marble will fizz because of the chemical reaction with its calcium carbonate makeup.