At high enough temperature anything evaporates; these two require a very high temperature indeed. A mixture would have a boiling point somewhere in the middle.
No, it reacts with both materials
Hydrochloric acid evaporates off of potassium sulfate when it's produced. This results because potassium chloride is combined with sulfuric acid to create potassium sulfate.
Hydrochloric acid is the third strongest acid after sulfuric acid and hydrofluoric acid.
The "hydro" part indicates there's hydrogen in it, but not all hydrogen-containing acids start with hydro...sulfuric acid contains more hydrogen than either hydrochloric or hydrofluoric. "-ic" is pretty common for acids...hydrochloric, hydrofluoric, sulfuric, nitric, acetic...
You can't! It's not possible! It is possible to dissolve it. It is only soluble in hydrofluoric acid or very hot concentrated sulfuric acid, but it can be done.
No, it reacts with both materials
Hydrochloric acid evaporates off of potassium sulfate when it's produced. This results because potassium chloride is combined with sulfuric acid to create potassium sulfate.
Hydrochloric acid is the third strongest acid after sulfuric acid and hydrofluoric acid.
No sulfuric acid has no effect on glass (of any kind), only acids containing fluorine like hydrofluoric acid (HF) can attack glass. However the sulfuric acid will probably damage whatever material that the glass is mounted in.
The "hydro" part indicates there's hydrogen in it, but not all hydrogen-containing acids start with hydro...sulfuric acid contains more hydrogen than either hydrochloric or hydrofluoric. "-ic" is pretty common for acids...hydrochloric, hydrofluoric, sulfuric, nitric, acetic...
Things found in etching creams: Barium Sulfate, Sulfuric Acid, Sodium Bifluoride, and Ammonium hydrogen difluoride. Hydrofluoric acid is the main ingredient that will etch glass. Overall, the cream is a diluted form of hydrofluoric acid. It's not nearly as dangerous as pure hydrofluoric acid but still, be very cautious when using it.
You can't! It's not possible! It is possible to dissolve it. It is only soluble in hydrofluoric acid or very hot concentrated sulfuric acid, but it can be done.
Sulfuric acid is a strong acid because it ionizes completely.
A more diluted acid.
water, soda, juiceoil, sulfuric acid, gasoline, silicic acid (water glass), hydrofluoric acid, bromine, mercury.
Sulfuric acid falls from the clouds high above the surface of Venus, but it evaporates long before reaches the ground.
Yes, although it is different from acid rain on Earth. Earth's acid rain is water with small amounts of sulfuric and nitric acid. On Venus the rain is almost entirely sulfuric acid, with no liquid water. However, this rain evaporates before it reaches the ground.