No. Water vapour has the same chemical formula are liquid water. Essentially they are exactly the same thing in different states.
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Dissolve into water and it actually reacts with the water to form H3PO4, phosphoric acid.
No, only limestone dissolves.
For an acid to really work as an acid it must be in water. Acids not in water are typically crystalline and relatively nonreactive until in aq. form.
Ice is the solid form of water (H2O) and water vapour. water is the liquid form of water vapour and ice.
Oxygen oxidizes. CO2 needs water ... making carbonic acid, which will dissolve some rocks. Sulfa also needs water to eventually form sulfuric acid, which will dissolve just about anything.
Yes, it can to form carbonic acid.
Sulphur dioxide mixes with water vapour to form sulphurous and sulphuric acid.
Dissolve into water and it actually reacts with the water to form H3PO4, phosphoric acid.
No, only limestone dissolves.
For an acid to really work as an acid it must be in water. Acids not in water are typically crystalline and relatively nonreactive until in aq. form.
the sulphur is a base in fossil fuels (in this case coal). when the coal burns the sulphur reacts with the oxygen in the air to produce sulphur dioxide which reacts with water vapour to form acid rain
Yes.Additional answerThere's often some air in water, but not always. It has to dissolve to get there. It's not there automatically
Pure water is neutral and water in any form (solid: ice, liquid: water or gas: vapour) is always inorganic.
MgCl2 will dissolve in water to form?
Ice is the solid form of water (H2O) and water vapour. water is the liquid form of water vapour and ice.
No, water vapour is not in the solid form. Water vapour is the gas form of water and is represented chemically as H2O(g) where the (g) stands for gas.
plants release extra water in the form of water vapour from small holes of their leaves known as stomata ,that water vapour rises in the atmosphere in the form of clouds and that water vapour returns to earth in form of rain .