Yes.
One can make carbon dioxide by combining carbon-containing compounds, such as sugar or limestone, with an acid, such as vinegar or hydrochloric acid. This chemical reaction produces carbon dioxide gas as a byproduct.
When copper carbonate is mixed with hydrochloric acid, a chemical reaction occurs which produces copper chloride, carbon dioxide gas, and water. The copper carbonate will dissolve and react with the hydrochloric acid to form a blue-green solution. The carbon dioxide gas bubbles out of the solution, creating fizzing or effervescence.
Calcium carbonate reacts with dilute hydrochloric acid to form calcium chloride, water, and carbon dioxide gas. This reaction is a chemical reaction that produces effervescence due to the release of the carbon dioxide gas.
When magnesium carbonate is added to hydrochloric acid, a chemical reaction occurs that produces magnesium chloride, water, and carbon dioxide gas. The fizzing you see is the carbon dioxide gas being released. Once all the carbon dioxide has been produced and released, the fizzing stops.
The products are sodium chloride, carbon dioxide, and water.
One can make carbon dioxide by combining carbon-containing compounds, such as sugar or limestone, with an acid, such as vinegar or hydrochloric acid. This chemical reaction produces carbon dioxide gas as a byproduct.
When copper carbonate is mixed with hydrochloric acid, a chemical reaction occurs which produces copper chloride, carbon dioxide gas, and water. The copper carbonate will dissolve and react with the hydrochloric acid to form a blue-green solution. The carbon dioxide gas bubbles out of the solution, creating fizzing or effervescence.
Carbon don't react with acids, except concentrated Nitric acid. Concentrated nitric acid reacts with carbon to produce Water, Carbon dioxide, and Nitrogen dioxide.
Calcium carbonate reacts with dilute hydrochloric acid to form calcium chloride, water, and carbon dioxide gas. This reaction is a chemical reaction that produces effervescence due to the release of the carbon dioxide gas.
When magnesium carbonate is added to hydrochloric acid, a chemical reaction occurs that produces magnesium chloride, water, and carbon dioxide gas. The fizzing you see is the carbon dioxide gas being released. Once all the carbon dioxide has been produced and released, the fizzing stops.
The products are sodium chloride, carbon dioxide, and water.
When hydrochloric acid (HCl) reacts with sodium bicarbonate (NaHCO3), it produces carbon dioxide (CO2), water (H2O), and sodium chloride (NaCl) as products. The chemical equation for this reaction is: HCl + NaHCO3 → CO2 + H2O + NaCl.
When hydrochloric acid is mixed with calcium carbonate, it produces carbon dioxide gas, along with calcium chloride and water. The chemical reaction can be represented as: 2HCl + CaCO3 -> CaCl2 + CO2 + H2O
Carbon dioxide gas causes the fizzing when hydrochloric acid is added to calcium carbonate. This reaction produces carbon dioxide, water, and calcium chloride.
This statement is incorrect. When hydrochloric acid is dissolved in water, it dissociates into hydrogen ions (H+) and chloride ions (Cl-). There is no production of carbon dioxide and oxygen in this reaction.
When a carbonate, such as calcium carbonate, reacts with an acid, such as hydrochloric acid, it undergoes a chemical reaction and produces carbon dioxide gas, water, and a salt. The reaction can be represented by the general equation: Carbonate + Acid -> Carbon Dioxide + Water + Salt.
This is a chemical change because the antacid tablet reacting with the hydrochloric acid results in the formation of a new substance (carbon dioxide gas) that was not present before.