If you add a higher concentration of acid, or increase the temperature, the reaction will go faster.
Not exactly. Acid eats iron through a chemical reaction, but oxidation (rust) is something different.
why does adding water to an acid make it eaiser to deal with
When H2O is added to acid it begins to boil due to the strong reaction between the acid and the Base (the water). Don´t add H2O to acids add acid to water. Water is both an acid and a base, when it is reacting with acid it becomes base and reacts with base it becomes acid.
If you have an acid of unknown strength, you add Universal Indicator & add drops of a base. Count the drops of the base until the solution turns green (neutral) This should tell you how strong the acid is. This can also be done the other way (with a base of unknown strength & adding an acid) Does that make sense?
Yes it would make acid, thanks for asking
it is a neutralization reaction.
Hydrochloric acid
yes
This reaction is called a neutralization reaction. It involves the combination of an acid and a base (alkali) to form water and a salt.
It is a neutralisation reaction, it is also an exothermic reaction.
the two are not the same ones an acid and ones a sodium. so it will make a acid base reaction
No