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No, reacting zinc with hydrogen chloride will yield zinc chloride and hydrogen gas. Potassium chloride can be prepared by reacting potassium with hydrogen chloride or (more safely) potassium hydroxide with hydrogen chloride.
These compounds doesn't react.
Calcium can react with hydrochloric acid. The products formed are calcium chloride and hydrogen gas.
total ionic equation (also known as the complete ionic equation) for the reaction of potassium carbonate with hydrochloric acid
Because acids and bases react very strongly. You can look for reaction of potassium with water - and imagine that hydrochloric acid is much stronger than water.
No, reacting zinc with hydrogen chloride will yield zinc chloride and hydrogen gas. Potassium chloride can be prepared by reacting potassium with hydrogen chloride or (more safely) potassium hydroxide with hydrogen chloride.
These compounds doesn't react.
Calcium can react with hydrochloric acid. The products formed are calcium chloride and hydrogen gas.
total ionic equation (also known as the complete ionic equation) for the reaction of potassium carbonate with hydrochloric acid
Because acids and bases react very strongly. You can look for reaction of potassium with water - and imagine that hydrochloric acid is much stronger than water.
is by reacting it with chlorine so that you will have ammonium chloride as your product, that will have a white fume
Potassium sulfate is neither base nor acid - it is a salt. You could get it by mixing something like potassium hydroxide (a base) with sulfuric acid and allowing the neutralization reaction to occur. Since it is actually often produce by reacting potassium chloride with sulfuric acid to get potassium sulfate and HCl (aka hydrogen chloride, aka hydrochloric acid when dissolved in water) you might expect it to be contaminated with some residual acid.
It can be prepared by reacting Potassium amide(KNH2) with Nitrous oxide(N2O):2 KNH2 + N2O ----> KN3 + KOH + NH3
I am guessing that you mean hydrochloric acid, and the reaction is ammonia plus hydrochloric acid gives ammonium chloride; NH3 + HCl => NH4Cl
they reacting togethor. Then form NH4Cl asa result.
ca-o bonds in calcium oxide and h-cl bonds in hydrochloric acid
if table salt means sodium chloride then it may form from hydrochloric acid by reacting with sodium hydroxide, but table salt is not pure sodium chloride it also contains a small quantity of magnesium and calcium chloride.