it depends what type of acid u are using.
If u are talking about stomach acids it can disolve the metal in 6-7 hours
Hydrogen gas is always produced when acids react with metals because the acids contain hydrogen atoms that combine together and are released as hydrogen gas when a salt is made between the metal and the rest of the acid. Examples: Zn(s)+2HCl->H2(g)+ZnCl2 H2SO4+Mg(s)->H2(g)+MgSO4
Pure metals are neither, no pure element is and acid or an alkali, it is only compounds made from elements that have this property. When metals form compounds those compounds are typically alkaline.
Obsidian does not react with acid. Igneous rocks in general rarely react with acid.
When acids react with alkalis, they undergo a neutralization reaction to form salt and water. This process involves the transfer of protons from the acid to the alkali, resulting in the formation of a salt and water as the products.
Many acids react with most metals, often producing soluble substances. Acid + metal --> salt + water. This 'eats' away at the container and causes it to leak. Glass (almost always) and polythene are unaffected by acids. However, before the advent of polythene, concentrated sulfuric acid was stored in lead vessels.
Yes, it is correct.
Hydrogen gas is always produced when acids react with metals because the acids contain hydrogen atoms that combine together and are released as hydrogen gas when a salt is made between the metal and the rest of the acid. Examples: Zn(s)+2HCl->H2(g)+ZnCl2 H2SO4+Mg(s)->H2(g)+MgSO4
Hydrogen
Water and salt is made.
Pure metals are neither, no pure element is and acid or an alkali, it is only compounds made from elements that have this property. When metals form compounds those compounds are typically alkaline.
the acid eats away at carbonates
(the metal) oxide for example aluminum oxide
Obsidian does not react with acid. Igneous rocks in general rarely react with acid.
When acids react with alkalis, they undergo a neutralization reaction to form salt and water. This process involves the transfer of protons from the acid to the alkali, resulting in the formation of a salt and water as the products.
An acid and a base will react to produce a salt and (usually) water.
Yes, this is true; the reaction is called neutralization.
Yes, this is true; the reaction is called neutralization.