The fluorescence of quinine is stronger in sulfuric acid solutions.
Herapathite reaction is the reaction which is used to produce the complex sulfate or selenate.e.g.whe aristoquin(diquinine carbonic ester) is dissolved in hydrochloric or sulfuric acid,carbon dioxide is evolved and quinine chloride or quinine disulfate is formed,respectively.
hope this isn't someone from charter.
Lead sulfate is the product.
R. A. Velapoldi has written: 'A Fluorescence standard reference material, quinine sulfate dihydrate' -- subject(s): Fluorescence, Materials, Optical properties, Quinine sulfate, Standards
Sulfuric acid.
Any thing ending in sulfate e.g. calcium sulfate, copper sulfate
an iron salt of sulfuric acid
Lead sulfate is the product.
Magnesium will react with sulfuric acid to produce magnesium sulfate.
The reactions of sodium hydroxide and calcium hydroxide with sulfuric acid will produce sodium sulfate and calcium sulfate respectively (water will be another product in both reactions. Sodium sulfate is soluble in water and so will remain in solution. Calcium sulfate, however, is insoluble and will precipitate as a solid.
This is the sulfuric acid - H2SO4.
Neither. Sulfate, SO4, is a polyatomic ion. Sulfuric acid (H2SO4), however, is an acid.