yes, it does react. It produces NaCl + CO2 + H2O
so it looks like this...
NaHCO3 + HCl ---> NaCl + CO2 + H2O
CO2 as gas H2O as a liquid NaCl as aqueous
12.5 mL * 5.0 (m)mol/(m)L HCl = 62.5 mmol spilled HClneeds62.5 mmol NaHCO3 = 62.5 mmol * 84.01 (m)g/(m)mol NaHCO3 = 5250 mg NaHCO3 = 5.25 g pure NaHCO3
The answer to the conversion is that 35.0 grams of hydrochloride (HCL) equals 0.76 moles. The conversion rate is 35.0 grams divided by 46 gram per mole. A mole is the molecular weight of a substance.
When NaHCO3 plus HCL reacted they forum two different substance that is H4CO3+NaCl, That is the balanced formula.
Sodium hydroxide in a pure form is a solid, so you cannot dissolve anything in it. Normally, NaOH is used as an aqueous solution. But salicylic acid dissolves in water, so the presence of NaOH in the water is irrelevant to the solubility of salicylic acid. It is the water, not the NaOH, that dissolves the salicylic acid.
CO2 as gas H2O as a liquid NaCl as aqueous
Baking soda is sodium bicarbonate, NaHCO3. Sodium bicarbonate and hydrochloric acid, HCl, react to form sodium chloride, NaCl and carbonic acid, H2CO3. NaHCO3 + HCl ---> NaCl + H2CO3
12.5 mL * 5.0 (m)mol/(m)L HCl = 62.5 mmol spilled HClneeds62.5 mmol NaHCO3 = 62.5 mmol * 84.01 (m)g/(m)mol NaHCO3 = 5250 mg NaHCO3 = 5.25 g pure NaHCO3
The answer to the conversion is that 35.0 grams of hydrochloride (HCL) equals 0.76 moles. The conversion rate is 35.0 grams divided by 46 gram per mole. A mole is the molecular weight of a substance.
Any chemical reaction is possible.
When NaHCO3 plus HCL reacted they forum two different substance that is H4CO3+NaCl, That is the balanced formula.
Several part problem. Get molarity of NaHCO3. (150 ml)( M NaHCO3) = (150 ml)(0.44 M HCl) = 0.44 M NaHCO3 --------------------------- get moles NaHCO3 ( 150 ml = 0.150 Liters ) 0.44 M NaHCO3 = moles NaHCO3/0.150 Liters = 0.066 moles NaHCO3 ---------------------------------------get grams 0.066 moles NaHCO3 (84.008 grams/1 mole NaHCO3) = 5.54 grams NaHCO3 needed ---------------------------------------------answer
Sodium hydroxide in a pure form is a solid, so you cannot dissolve anything in it. Normally, NaOH is used as an aqueous solution. But salicylic acid dissolves in water, so the presence of NaOH in the water is irrelevant to the solubility of salicylic acid. It is the water, not the NaOH, that dissolves the salicylic acid.
NaHCO3 can react in water solutins with acids forming carbon dioxide, water and a salt.
NaCl and HCl doesn't react.
Nacl+Hcl+CaCO3
Sodium bicarbonate will react with hydrochloric acid to form sodium chloride. NaHCO3 + HCl --> NaCl + H2O + CO2