nickel carbonate is insoluble while sodium carbonate is, so therefore it would be easy to extract the sodium carbonate by adding water to the mixture
This is impossible because both are very soluble and even hydrate-forming when crystallized from saturated solution.
- Put the mixture in water
- Nickel chloride is dissolved
- After filtering lead remain on the filter
First of all, since Magnesium Carbonate is not Soluble in water you couldn't have a solution of these two salts in water. But if you had a mixture of the two in powdered form and need to separate them simply dissolve what you can in water, the part that wont dissolve is the magnesium carbonate and you could them filter it out and let the solution of sodium carbonate dry out and there you have the two separated.
You could die.
You could melt Sodium chloride and use electrolysis to separate the Sodium and the Chlorine, which is how Sodium is produced on an industrial scale.
No I cannot answer it! Hahahahahahahahahaha!
Baking powder (sodium monohydrogen carbonate, or -bicarbonate) could be added.
Sodium Carbonate is not a gas it is a solution. I think you mean how can you test for Carbon Dioxide - bubble it though limewater and you will get Sodium Carbonate.
First of all, since Magnesium Carbonate is not Soluble in water you couldn't have a solution of these two salts in water. But if you had a mixture of the two in powdered form and need to separate them simply dissolve what you can in water, the part that wont dissolve is the magnesium carbonate and you could them filter it out and let the solution of sodium carbonate dry out and there you have the two separated.
You could die.
You could melt Sodium chloride and use electrolysis to separate the Sodium and the Chlorine, which is how Sodium is produced on an industrial scale.
Yes, sodium carbonate is the same for use in the pool as for use in the laundry.
it could be sodium bicarbonate or potassium carbonate or sodium benzoate.
add electric current to separate the sodium from the chlorine
No I cannot answer it! Hahahahahahahahahaha!
The effect of sodium carbonate on soap can differ depending on the type of water used. Hard water could cause the soap to bubble more, while fresh water could cause the soap to not bubble at all.
Water is deleted by heating and evaporation.
No, not the lead
Soda is an ambiguous term that could mean any of several different things. It's been used to refer to sodium carbonate Na2CO3, sodium hydrogen carbonate NaHCO3, sodium hydroxide NaOH, and sodium oxide Na2O. It also is used to mean carbonated beverages, which are mixtures, not compounds, and therefore don't have molecular formulae.