No, sodium acetate is a solid under normal conditions.
No visible reaction. It stays clear. No Odor either.
what does sodium metal and choline gas react to form
it results in hydrogen gas and sodium chloride.
Sodium Chloride is not a gas solid. It is in crystalline form which when heated, becomes molten. It never evaporates to give Sodium Chloride gas i.e. NaCl.
Sodium metal is very reactive and would explode when in contact with water and produce hydrogen gas.
CO2
When sodium acetate react with soda lime it produce sodium carbonate and methane gas. CH3COONa + NaOH---------- NaCO3 + CH4
Yes, very fast, it forms sodium acetate and hydrogen gas.
It makes Sodium Acetate (Na(C2H3O2))and Hydrogen gas (H2)
Sodium acetate is a compound. Generally, when the name of a substance contains two or more words (unless one of them is solid, liquid, gas, or metal), it is not an element.
Reaction of sodium acetate and sulfuric acid is: Na-Acetate + H2SO4 --> Na2SO4 + H-Acetate The reaction results are Sodium Sulfate or usually called Glauber salt and Acetic acid. Reaction of sodium acetate and sulfuric acid is: Na-Acetate + H2SO4 --> Na2SO4 + H-Acetate The reaction results are Sodium Sulfate or usually called Glauber salt and Acetic acid.
with the reaction of acetic acid + sodium bicarbonate---->sodium acetate + h2co3 the product h2co3 is highly unstable which is eager to break down into its components of H2O and Co2 which is why gas bubbles are observed (its the CO2 that's formed in the process)
Produces Carbon Dioxide gas which will be liberated, and sodium acetate with water.
A chemical reaction releases carbon dioxide gas (lots of bubbles), and a solution of sodium acetate and water remain.
acetic acid can be used for many different things, and is found in vinegar and can be used to make sodium acetate, calcium acetate, and many other chemicals. That is why vinegar and baking soda causes bubbles of carbon dioxide gas to form,water, and sodium acetate is also formed in the process
Baking soda is sodium bicarbonate. The acetic acid in vinegar reacts with sodium bicarbonate to form sodium acetate and carbonic acid. The carbonic acid immediately breaks down into water and carbon dioxide gas. The gas forms expanding bubbles that cause an "eruption."
No visible reaction. It stays clear. No Odor either.