sodium in water form compound with OH as water breaks in H+ and OH- and Na forms NaOH
The reaction of sodium and water is considered to be a chemical change.
Sodium hydroxide (NaOH) is formed.
because then it would explode..... because even the slightest bit of water that touches sodium can cause a huge reaction and make it explode.
The density of sodium is 0.968g/cm3 which is just slightly lower than that of water, which is 1.00g/cm3. When sodium is added to water, the piece of sodium would float and sometimes dart around the sides of the beaker. It is a violent reaction and the heat evolved from the exothermic reaction is sufficient to ignite the hydrogen gas and cause the sodium to burn.
no
IT WOULD PROB BUBBLE
Sodium wins!
explosion
when sodium reacts with water, a vigorous reaction is seen. the sodium metal floats around on the surface of the water and hydrogen gas bubbles are released as it fizzes. the gas is colourless but it can be collected and tested. another one of the products would be sodium hydroxide which is a base (all hydroxides are). it can be tested with litmus paper and the universal indicator. the equation of the reaction between sodium and water would be: Sodium) + Water = Sodium hydroxide) + Hydrogen) Na + H2O = NaOH + H2
its chemestry
Sodium is MUCH faster.
Sodium sulfate dissolves in water to produce a solution of sodium sulfate.
If you mix sodium carbonate and water, you would observe that the sodium carbonate dissolves in the water. This is because sodium carbonate is highly soluble in water. The solution may also become slightly warm due to the dissolution process.
Grammatically correct: "Drank" sodium water... and NO YOU DIDN'T!! Sodium catches fire and typically EXPLODES... that is to say, thee is a strong chemical reaction between the H2O and pure sodium.
The reaction of sodium and water is considered to be a chemical change.
No. Water and sodium hydroxide will form a solution, but no reaction occurs.
When 10g of sodium are put into 100g of water, the reaction produces only 109.6g of sodium hydroxide because of the sodium's solvency. Some of the sodium is displaced in the reaction, and this is why it does not seem to add up.