Limestone for sure, dolomite mildly.
The metamorphic rock marble would react with hydrochloric acid.
To find the weight of magnesium needed to react with 9.125g of hydrochloric acid, you would first balance the chemical equation between magnesium and hydrochloric acid. Then, calculate the molar ratio between magnesium and hydrochloric acid. Finally, use the molar mass of magnesium to determine the weight needed for the reaction.
Nitric acid reacts strongly with many metals.
No, not at room temperature. It does react with hot hydrochloric acid to form a complex ion with the titanium in the +3 oxidation state but this is not the standard Metal + Acid -> Salt + Hydrogen reaction of more reactive metals
When hydrochloric acid is added to a mixture of bromine and water, bromine will react with hydrochloric acid to form hydrogen bromide and hypobromous acid. This reaction can then proceed further to form bromine chloride and bromine, depending on the conditions present.
Germanium does not react with hydrochloric acid at room temperature. However, it can react with hydrochloric acid when heated, forming germanium chloride.
Gold react with aqua regia not with hydrochloric acid.
No, the hydrochloric acid being strong would precipitate the rosin acid out anyway.
Sedimentary rocks contain minerals such as calcite that react with hydrochloric acid by producing visible effervescence, bubbles of carbon dioxide gas. This reaction occurs because the acid breaks down the calcite minerals, releasing the carbon dioxide gas as a byproduct.
No,Hydrochloric acid contains water while carbolic acid does not so they do not mix with each other and do not react.
Sulfur does not react with hydrochloric acid.
Copper does not react with hydrochloric acid because it is a less reactive metal and does not displace hydrogen from the acid.
Gold is a metal that does not react with dilute hydrochloric acid.
Calcium would react with hydrochloric acid to produce calcium chloride and hydrogen gas. The reaction is a single displacement reaction in which calcium replaces hydrogen in hydrochloric acid to form the products.
No, not all rocks react with hydrochloric acid. Rocks that contain calcium carbonate, such as limestone and marble, will react with hydrochloric acid by producing carbon dioxide gas. However, rocks that do not contain calcium carbonate will not have a reaction with hydrochloric acid.
The metamorphic rock marble would react with hydrochloric acid.
No, not all metals react with hydrochloric acid to produce hydrogen gas. Only metals higher in the reactivity series than hydrogen, such as zinc, iron, and magnesium, will react with hydrochloric acid to form hydrogen gas. Metals like gold, silver, and platinum do not react with hydrochloric acid.