No visible reaction. It stays clear. No Odor either.
On heating they produce Methane gas and Sodium carbonate.
Reaction as follows:
CH3COOH + NaOH --> CH3COONa + H2O
Sodium acetate is the salt formed by this.
The reaction is:
NaOH + HCl = NaCl + H2O
You get salt (NaCl) and water H2O
HCl + NaOH --> H20 + NaCl
In a solution, lead (II) acetate (Pb(II)Ac2) and sodium carbonate (Na2CO3) will react to form Pb(II)CO3, an insoluble compound that will form a precipitate. The Na+and Ac- will remain in solution.
Sodium phosphate is obtained.
The acetate would combine with the bromide, leaving the silver in the sodium solution. With the sliver you could blow up the world Alas not so exciting. Mixed as solids, nothing would happen. Silver acetate has limited solubility in water, but if a solution were mixed with sodium bromide, you would probably see some off-white silver bromide precipitate.
Sodium chloride remain in solution; lead(II) chloride is practically insoluble in water.
Whenever you mix an acid and an alkali, you always get a salt and water regardless of what the acid and alkali are. So in this case you would get sodium citrate and water as an end product.
Acetic acid
you get salt water which is called sodium hydroxide You get sodium hydroxide as stated above but NOT salt water as this is sodium chloride in water which has the formula NaCl and not NaOH.
Produces Carbon Dioxide gas which will be liberated, and sodium acetate with water.
Sodium hydroxide simply becomes ionized in water, no reaction will occur. And the concentration of NaOH will be reduced, if enough water is added.
water and salt........or sodium acetate and water.....or NaCH3COO + H2O
In a solution, lead (II) acetate (Pb(II)Ac2) and sodium carbonate (Na2CO3) will react to form Pb(II)CO3, an insoluble compound that will form a precipitate. The Na+and Ac- will remain in solution.
The following table is extracted from the Internet:* For pH=3: mix 982,3 mL 0,1 M acetic acid with 17,7 mL 0,1 M sodium acetate* For pH=4: mix 847,0 mL 0,1 M acetic acid with 153 mL 0,1 M sodium acetate* For pH=5: mix 357 mL 0,1 M acetic acid with 643 mL 0,1 M sodium acetate* For pH=3: mix 52,2 mL 0,1 M acetic acid with 947,8 mL 0,1 M sodium acetate
When CO2 gas is mixed with sodium hydroxide (NaOH) solution, it reacts to form sodium carbonate (Na2CO3) and water (H2O). The reaction can be represented by the equation: CO2 + 2NaOH → Na2CO3 + H2O.
When you mix the solutions of Sodium Hydroxide and barium chloride then a double replecement occurs.2 NaOH + BaCl2 = 2 NaCl + Ba(OH)2
Nothing
sodium lactate
Depends on your starting concentration, if it is 1.0M NaOH and you are trying to get to 0.13M. Simply measure 7mL of 1.0M NaOH, add 93mL of distilled water and mix it and you then have 0.13M NaOH.