It's a combustion reaction: H2CO3(aq) --> H20(l) + CO2(g)
Dilute sulfuric acid and aqueous sodium carbonate not only produce water and salt but carbon dioxide too. Sodium carbonate + sulfuric acid → sodium sulfate + carbon dioxide + water
Carbon dioxide.
THe gas is carbon dioxide. Remember the general acid reaction equation. Acid + Carbonate = Salt + Water + Carbon Dioxide.
sodium hydrogen carbonate + stearic acid ----> sodium stearate + water + carbon dioxide:) I this helps!
The name of the gas made when hydrogen carbonate reacts with acetic acid is carbon dioxide.
Dilute sulfuric acid and aqueous sodium carbonate not only produce water and salt but carbon dioxide too. Sodium carbonate + sulfuric acid → sodium sulfate + carbon dioxide + water
Some of the process that fix carbon dioxide are limewater + carbon dioxide equals calcium carbonate + water. Another is calcium carbonate + water + carbon dioxide = aqueous calcium bicarbonate. These equations work in reverse to release carbon dioxide.
Carbon dioxide.
THe gas is carbon dioxide. Remember the general acid reaction equation. Acid + Carbonate = Salt + Water + Carbon Dioxide.
This is hydrogen.
When sodium hydrogen carbonate is heated, it decomposes, like any other hydrogen carbonate to form metal carbonate and carbon dioxide gas NaHCO3 + heat + water --> Na2CO3 +CO2 +H2O
sodium hydrogen carbonate + stearic acid ----> sodium stearate + water + carbon dioxide:) I this helps!
Carbon dioxide form a milky suspension of calcium carbonate in calcium hydroxide; hydrogen doesn't react. But hydrogen react with oxygen when a flame exist.
No, that eq. does not contain Sodium which you mentioned as a product.
The name of the gas made when hydrogen carbonate reacts with acetic acid is carbon dioxide.
Sodium hydrogen carbonate and nitric acid react to form sodium nitrate, carbon dioxide, and water.
The hydrogen carbonate indicator is a dark, deep red, but then turns a brighter and richer colour red. :)