No. Water and sodium hydroxide will form a solution, but no reaction occurs.
It makes sodiumchloride and water
Sodium chloride is formed when sodium hydroxide and hydrochloric acid react. This is a neutralization reaction where the sodium hydroxide (a base) and hydrochloric acid (an acid) combine to form a salt (sodium chloride) and water.
The products of sodium when it is react with water are Sodium Hydroxide solution and hydrogen gas plus heat.
HCl (hydrochloric acid) and NaOH (sodium hydroxide) will react to NaCl (sodium chloride) and water.
Yes, sodium hydroxide can react with copper to form copper(II) hydroxide. When sodium hydroxide is added to a solution containing copper ions, a blue precipitate of copper(II) hydroxide is formed.
Yes, they do react, to form Sodium sulfate and Water
Sodium hydroxide and sodium sulfate don't actually react.
Ethanoic acid is fully soluble in water, but it will react with sodium hydroxide.
There is no reaction. "Hydroxide acid" is water, which does not react with sodium hydroxide.
It makes sodiumchloride and water
Sort of. Sodium oxide reacts with water to form sodium hydroxide, which is soluble.
Sodium will react with water to produce sodium hydroxide (NaOH) and water.
155.2 g
The iron(III) hydroxide is not soluble in water and doesn't react with sodium chloride.
Sodium chloride is formed when sodium hydroxide and hydrochloric acid react. This is a neutralization reaction where the sodium hydroxide (a base) and hydrochloric acid (an acid) combine to form a salt (sodium chloride) and water.
The products of sodium when it is react with water are Sodium Hydroxide solution and hydrogen gas plus heat.
Metallic copper does not react with sodium hydroxide. But if sodium hydroxide is added into a solution of copper ions, it would form Copper(II) Hydroxide. It is a precipitate which is insoluble in water.