Don't try this, under any circumstances. Sulphuric acid is a very strong acid, and will cause great damage.
Sulfuric acid is a compound. It is made up of sulfur, oxygen, and hydrogen atoms chemically bonded together.
Copper oxide and sulfuric acid will react together to produce copper sulfate.
acid precipatation
It depends a little on your definition. Concentrated Sulfuric Acid can be produced up to 98% or 98.3% pure H2SO4. So, while H2SO4 would be considered a compound, it is never pure, and is always found in a mixture. Most Sulfuric Acid used in the lab is a much more dilute mixture of Sulfuric Acid and Water. Fuming Sulfuric Acid is a mixture between Sulfuric Acid, H2SO4 and sulfur trioxide SO3.
SO3 + H2O --> H2SO4 commonly called sulfuric acid.
Alcohol, mercury, gasoline, sulfuric acid, paint and VERY cold oxygen.
Sulfuric acid is a compound
Adding sulfuric acid to water is the recommended way of working to avoid accidents.
Sulfuric acid is a compound. It is made up of sulfur, oxygen, and hydrogen atoms chemically bonded together.
sulfuric acid or sulphuric acid
No, sulfuric acid does not dissolve in hexane. Sulfuric acid is a polar substance, while hexane is nonpolar. Polar and nonpolar substances do not mix easily and tend to remain separate when mixed together.
No. Sulfuric acid is a compound containing three different kinds of atoms.
Yes. I have no idea what will happen if you do though.
No, because they are both acids. Sulfuric acid would only undergo an neutralization reaction when it comes in contact with a base (sodium hydroxide, baking soda, etc). When you mix sulfuric with hydrochloric acid, the only thing that would happen is that the sulfuric acid would dehydrate the hydrochloric acid, causing it to release nasty fumes of hydrogen chloride gas.
Yes. The Sulfur dioxide produced from volcanoes is what forms into sulfuric acid, which is acid rain.
Sulfuric acid is H2SO4
When Sulfuric Acid mixes with rain, it creates Acid Rain.