No, because the calcium sulfate formed is insoluble in water.
Mix dilute hydrochloric acid with calcium carbonate to obtain a calcium chloride solution; then add sodium sulphate solution to the calcium chloride solution to obtain calcium sulphate precipitate.
The products are calcium and magnesium chlorides, water and carbon dioxide.
no reaction occurs .. they just mix together.
chalky white precipitate
Sodium react with water and release hydrogen.Sodium hydroxide is also formed. Calcium hydroxide remain unchanged.
precipitate means done with very great haste and without due deliberation; separate as a fine suspension of solid particles When two chemicals in solution react to form a compound which is not soluble in water, the insoluble chemical appears as small undissolved particles = a precipitate. Sodium sulphate and calcium nitrate are both soluble forming clear solutions in water. Mix the solutions and they switch around to sodium nitrate (soluble) plus calcium sulphate (insoluble) and you get a milky looking suspension of calcium sulphate which is the precipitate.
precipitate means done with very great haste and without due deliberation; separate as a fine suspension of solid particles When two chemicals in solution react to form a compound which is not soluble in water, the insoluble chemical appears as small undissolved particles = a precipitate. Sodium sulphate and calcium nitrate are both soluble forming clear solutions in water. Mix the solutions and they switch around to sodium nitrate (soluble) plus calcium sulphate (insoluble) and you get a milky looking suspension of calcium sulphate which is the precipitate.
it forms calcium sulphate
There will be no reaction because they have the same anions i.e. nitrate
Mix dilute hydrochloric acid with calcium carbonate to obtain a calcium chloride solution; then add sodium sulphate solution to the calcium chloride solution to obtain calcium sulphate precipitate.
you get carbon dioxide if you mix any acid with a carbonate aswell as water and calcium nitrate. 2HNO3(aq) + CaCO3(s) = Ca(NO3)2(s) + H2O(l) + CO2(g) Ca is a 2+ ion, and the NO3 is only a - ion, therefore two are needed! this balances the equation.
iron sulphate will be created
Well, isn't that a happy little question! When you mix calcium and copper sulfate together, you'll see a chemical reaction take place. The calcium will replace the copper in the copper sulfate, forming calcium sulfate and releasing copper as a solid. It's like nature's own little magic show right in front of your eyes!
When you mix calcium hydroxide with nitric acid, a chemical reaction occurs that produces calcium nitrate, water, and heat. The balanced chemical equation for this reaction is Ca(OH)2 + 2HNO3 → Ca(NO3)2 + 2H2O. The resulting solution will be neutral or slightly acidic.
No reaction will occur between Potassium Sulfate and Ammonium Nitrate.
Ammonium nitrate is not explosive, it is an effective oxidizer. Mix it with a fuel and you have explosive.
When calcium carbonate is mixed with sulphuric acid, it undergoes a chemical reaction forming calcium sulfate, carbon dioxide gas, and water. The reaction is exothermic, releasing heat. It is a common reaction used in various industries for different purposes including in the production of gypsum and in waste water treatment.