calcium carbonate + hydrochloric acid -> Carbon dioxide + Water+ Calcium Chloride
In general, when a carbonate is added to an acid, the equation will be
carbonate + acid -> salt + water + carbon dioxide
Do you mean CaOH2 + H2CaO3?
In that case, it would be CaO3H2 + H2CaO3
What you suggested cannot be balanced, because the two equations contain different elements - Ca in one and C in the other.
CuCO3 + 2HCl --> CuCl2 + H2CO3
The H2CO3, if not under pressure, will then decompose into CO2 + H2O
-Dr. Prouty, PhD.
Ca(OH)2 + 2HCl --> CaCl2 + 2H2O
Products are calcium chloride, a salt, and water.
2HCl+CaCO3 -----> CaCl2+H2O+CO2
CaCH2SO7
Cl2 + H2O = HOCl + HCl
5.05 g/mol
No, It is is a double replacement. AB +CD = AC + BD
k2co3 + 2hcl --> kcl +h2o +co2
both h2o and HCl are polar compounds they should react being polar compound's. in h20 hydrogen carries positive charge and oxygen consists of negative charge. similarly in hcl hydrogen carries positive charge and chlorine carries negative charge. both chlorine and oxygen are negative so they will repel each other the remaining hydrogen will be attracted towards the negatively charged oxygen and forms h30 and cl respectively.
The HCl is hydrochloric acid
magnesium chloride
hcl acid
Yes it is
3(Cl2) + 3(H2O) = 5(HCl) + 1(HClO3)
Cl2 + H2O = HOCl + HCl
single replacement
5.05 g/mol
HCl and KCl do NOT react
No. Zn + 2HCl = ZnCl2 + H2
Me too i don't know
The Cl- ions in HCl is oxidized to Cl2