An explosion
No, sulfuric acid cannot dissolve gold. Aqua regia, a mixture of nitric acid and hydrochloric acid, is typically used to dissolve gold.
Mixing bromothymol blue and sulfuric acid would not result in a colour change, as sulfuric acid is a strong acid and bromothymol blue is a pH indicator that changes colour based on the acidity or alkalinity of a solution.
A mixture of hydrochloric acid and sulfuric acid is typically referred to as "aqua regia." This highly corrosive mixture is used for dissolving noble metals such as gold and platinum.
Gold is one of the least reactive metal. When gold is mixed with acid, it does not react or dissolve. Gold reacts only with AQUA REGIA [three parts of concentrated hydrochloric acid and one part of nitric acid.] AQUA REGIA can dissolve almost all metals.
Gold does not react with sulfuric acid.The only acid that gold reacts with is aqua regia: a mixture of nitric acid and hydrochloric acid, optimally in a molar ratio of 1:3.
Mixing bromothymol blue and sulfuric acid would not result in a colour change, as sulfuric acid is a strong acid and bromothymol blue is a pH indicator that changes colour based on the acidity or alkalinity of a solution.
No, sulfuric acid cannot dissolve gold. Aqua regia, a mixture of nitric acid and hydrochloric acid, is typically used to dissolve gold.
A mixture of hydrochloric acid and sulfuric acid is typically referred to as "aqua regia." This highly corrosive mixture is used for dissolving noble metals such as gold and platinum.
Gold is one of the least reactive metal. When gold is mixed with acid, it does not react or dissolve. Gold reacts only with AQUA REGIA [three parts of concentrated hydrochloric acid and one part of nitric acid.] AQUA REGIA can dissolve almost all metals.
Mixing of conc. sulfuric acid with water
Gold does not react with sulfuric acid.The only acid that gold reacts with is aqua regia: a mixture of nitric acid and hydrochloric acid, optimally in a molar ratio of 1:3.
Nothing actually happens. However, if you add concentrated sulphuric acid to fuming nitric acid, you will have created aqua regia which will dissolve gold. Neither acid alone will do this, and it is used as a test for gold. Note. aqua regia is latin for royal water.
Aqua regia is typically prepared by mixing one part concentrated nitric acid with three parts concentrated hydrochloric acid, or in a 1:3 ratio. This ratio is important for achieving the desired oxidizing and dissolving properties of aqua regia.
Non-concentrated sulfuric acid refers to a diluted form of sulfuric acid where the concentration of sulfuric acid is lower than typical concentrated sulfuric acid solutions which are around 95-98% purity. Non-concentrated sulfuric acid is often prepared by mixing a specific amount of concentrated sulfuric acid with water to achieve the desired concentration for a particular application.
Sulfuric acid can dissolve gold, but it is not the most efficient or common method for extracting gold from ore. Other chemicals like cyanide or aqua regia are often used for gold extraction due to their higher effectiveness and selectivity. Additionally, the use of sulfuric acid on gold can be hazardous and should only be done by knowledgeable professionals with proper safety measures in place.
No, sulphate salts are very stable and can not be converted into acid.
Hydrochloric acid is HCL Sulfuric acid is H2SO4 Mixing hydrochloric and sulfuric acid would just result in the sulfuric acid sapping (dehydrating) the hydrochloric acid of its water, releasing a small amount of hydrogen chloride. However, no chemical reaction is taking place.