Add an acid to K2S or Na2S.It will emit H2S.
is a colourless gas that we breath. is in the air and has no colour
Burning of H2S produce SO2 and water.SO2 is the toxic gas.
Na2S + 2HCl = 2NaCl + H2S (smelly toxic gas) Sodium sulphide + hydrochloric acid => Salt (Sodium chloride) and Hydrogen sulphide
H2S is hydrogen sulphide. NOT the suffix ' ---ide'. It has the 'rotten eggs' smell. When opening a rotten egg, it is this gas that you smell.
Yes, pyrite does react with hydrochloric acid to form bubbles of sulfur dioxide gas. This reaction occurs because hydrochloric acid reacts with the iron sulfide in pyrite to release sulfur dioxide gas as a byproduct.
When hydrogen sulfide (H2S) burns, it is oxidized to form sulfur dioxide (SO2) gas.
is a colourless gas that we breath. is in the air and has no colour
H2S do not have bleaching properties.So it do not discolor
No, remember any element heated to a high enough temperature will form a gaseous phase for instance mercury vapour would be heavier than H2S.
H2S has a terribal smell.It smells like rotten eggs.
Using the balanced chemical equation, you can see that 2 moles of H2S will produce 2 moles of SO2. Therefore, 1 mole of H2S will produce 1 mole of SO2. Given that 14.2 L of SO2 gas is produced, you would need the same volume of H2S gas. For oxygen, the ratio of H2S to O2 is 3:2, so 1.5 times the volume of H2S gas is needed in O2 gas.
Yes - nearly always. H2S is a toxic gas and quite corrosive - slightly acidic.
Burning of H2S produce SO2 and water.SO2 is the toxic gas.
It is not using H2S gas. It is using H2O liquid.
Na2S + 2HCl = 2NaCl + H2S (smelly toxic gas) Sodium sulphide + hydrochloric acid => Salt (Sodium chloride) and Hydrogen sulphide
MDEA (methyl diethanolamine) absorbs H2S and CO2 through physical and chemical absorption processes. In physical absorption, H2S and CO2 are dissolved in the MDEA solution due to their solubility in the solvent. In chemical absorption, the H2S and CO2 react with MDEA to form stable compounds, which are then removed from the gas stream.
To determine the initial pressure of H2S gas in the flask, we need the total pressure and the partial pressure of another gas in equilibrium with H2S. Without the partial pressure of the other gas, we can't determine the initial pressure of H2S with just the Kp value and temperature provided.