You should throw up almost instantly. It's somewhat like Milk of Mg(though the molarity is a LOT lower in MOM) but instead it is Ca(OH)2 and has a pH of about ~12. You should go to the ER and be induced into vomiting. Signs of damage to the body can appear up to several days later and maybe internal organ damage. Your stomach should provide some sort of buffer because it has H+ ions laying around neutralizing the Ca(OH)2 and HCl. Still ER is probably your best best if you feel noxious at all or induced vomiting. Drink water to dilute it. MY grandmother drank some and I just gave here a soda can and she threw 95% of it up.
the calcium hydroxide will disolve while a bubbles appear
the colour changes to pink
Calcium Carbonate
CaCO3(s)+2NaOH(aq)--->Ca(OH)2(aq)+Na2CO3(aq) When you heat it later, the water in the solution evaporates leaving you with just the salts. Also, it is better to say, calcium carbonate is added to sodium hydroxide solution as you add a solid to a solution not really vice versa.
No reaction takes place. pH of the solution increase.
The products are sodium hydroxide and hydrogen.
the calcium hydroxide will disolve while a bubbles appear
Calcium Carbonate
the colour changes to pink
Yes, there is a difference. Slaked lime is the term used to refer to solid calcium hydroxide, and lime water is a calcium hydroxide solution. Admittedly, two distinct terms seems like overkill, but it happens a lot... for example, "salt" and "brine" is essentially the same situation. The terms are historical, and most chemists would just say "calcium hydroxide" and "calcium hydroxide solution" instead.
CaCO3(s)+2NaOH(aq)--->Ca(OH)2(aq)+Na2CO3(aq) When you heat it later, the water in the solution evaporates leaving you with just the salts. Also, it is better to say, calcium carbonate is added to sodium hydroxide solution as you add a solid to a solution not really vice versa.
Sodium react with water and release hydrogen.Sodium hydroxide is also formed. Calcium hydroxide remain unchanged.
It changes colors
No reaction takes place. pH of the solution increase.
nothing
When a saturated solution contains a nucleating point.
The solution will become unsaturated as the saturated concentration will increase. Solubility increases with temperature.