Sodium is a very reactive chemical element.
It doesn't really like it.
- Salt (sodium chloride) react with vinegar (acetic acid) forming sodium acetate. - No.
The ingredients for the process are easily available and inexpensive.
The most common set of metals that react with water at room temperature are the alkali metals, namely lithium, sodium, potassium, rubidium, cesium, and francium. while these metals react quite violently with water at room temperature, many if not most other metals have some sort of reaction with water at room temperature (IE, iron rusting in water)
On the periodic table, there are periods that are rows, and groups that are columns. Elements in the same group react like the other elements in the group.
It is a physical change because the reaction can easily be reversed and no heat is involved.
Sodium is a very reactive chemical element.
Sodium is very reactive and easily react with oxygen or water.
an acid will react easily with base, not with another acid (generally) so sulphuric acid reacts with sodium hydroxide (a base) and not with hydrochloric acid
Aluminium doesn't react with sodium bicarbonate.Aluminium react with sodium hydroxide.
Sodium hydroxide and sodium sulfate don't actually react.
Potassium has a chloride mixture which makes it so sodium interacts easily with it to form the bond
No sodium bicarbonate doesn't react with alcohols.
Gold does not react with sodium bromide.
Yes, they do react, to form Sodium sulfate and Water
Sodium and Chlorine form Sodium Chloride when they react. This is because the cation of sodium is added to the anion of chlorine.
Electrons doesn't react with sodium chloride.
Sodium chloride doesn't react with acids.