Calcium carbonate is a solid, such as chalk or limestone.
The immediate products of this reaction are calcium nitrate and carbonic acid. Carbonic acid is a highly unstable compound at the room temperature. It always tends to dissociate into carbon dioxide and water.
Actinium is a solid at room temperature.
iodine is solid at room temperature
Copper is a solid at room temperature.
It depends on the reaction temperature. At 298K, the heat of reaction is 179 kJ/mol
CaCO3 (calcium carbonate) is most likely to occur as a solid at room temperature.
I'm pretty sure Ca is a solid at room temperature
YES!!! It is a compound at any temperature up to approximately1000K, where upon it undergoes thermal decomposition to form Calcium Oxide (CaO)/(Lime) and carbon dioxide (CO2).
8,930g, or 8.93kg. Assuming you're at standard temperature and pressure, 2000/22.4=89.3mol CO2, which means 89.3mol CaCO3. At 100g/mol, that means 8,930g CaCO3.
The immediate products of this reaction are calcium nitrate and carbonic acid. Carbonic acid is a highly unstable compound at the room temperature. It always tends to dissociate into carbon dioxide and water.
Actinium is a solid at room temperature.
Fluorine is a gas at room temperature.Fluorine is a gas at room temperature
iodine is solid at room temperature
Copper is a solid at room temperature.
At room temperature and standard pressure the element Boron is a solid.
Whatever the room temperature happens to be at the time. If the room is 75° then the salt would be the same temperature.
What is the room temperature for oxygen