An acid reacting with a hydroxide will result in the formation of water and the corresponding salt of the hydroxide's cation and the acid's anion. So in this case the products are water and calcium nitrate.
Calcium nitrate+water
dilute: hydrochloric acid, sulphuric acid, nitric acid, sodium hydroxide, potassium hydroxide, ammmonia
Calcium hydroxide in limewater reacts with carbon dioxide to form calcium carbonate (insoluble and hence the emergence of murkiness) and water. Calcium carbonate can be considered as the salt formed from the neutralization of a strong base, calcium hydroxide, and a weak acid, carbonic acid. The pH of the solution of such a salt will be basic because the conjugate base of the weak acid, carbonate, is weakly basic.
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The lead carbonate is dissolved in nitric acid and carbon dioxide is released.
The answer depends on what other metals are in the alloy.
Ammonium hydroxide and nitric acid yield ammonium nitrate and water.
you would get calcium nitric and water. trust me people my dad's a scientist
Calcium Nitrate along with water.
Ca(NO3)2 the numbers are supposed to be subscript Nitric acid + Calcium hydroxide ----> Calcium Nitrate + Water 2HNO3 + Ca(OH)2 ---> Ca(NO3)2 + 2H2O
the equation isCa + HNO3 ----> Ca(NO3)2 + H2 reactants products
Calcium nitrate has a neutral solution (pH=7).
Calcium nitrate can be formed from calcium hydroxide and nitric acid.
Calcium nitrate, Ca (NO3)2 can be formed by reacting nitric acid with calcium hydroxide or a basic calcium salt.
Ca(OH)2 (calcium hydroxide) (Apex)
nitric acid and calcium hydroxide HNO3 + Ca(OH)2 ------> Ca(NO3)2 + H2O
Just gold and nitric acid. Gold's impervious to nitric acid.
potassium hydroxide is POH and nitric acid is HNO3