I believe so
NO
Yes, chemical weathering typically involves water as a key component. Water facilitates chemical reactions between minerals and other substances, leading to the breakdown and alteration of rocks over time.
Chemical weathering always forms new minerals through the breakdown and alteration of pre-existing rocks due to chemical reactions with water, oxygen, or other substances in the environment.
Seltzer water is almost always composed of water and carbon dioxide with no other additives, i.e. H2O and CO2
Adding chemical to water rather than water to chemical is important for safety and control of reactions. When a chemical is added to water, it allows for a more gradual mixing and reduces the risk of exothermic reactions that can cause splattering or boiling. This method also helps to prevent dangerous situations, such as the release of toxic fumes or excessive heat generation. Furthermore, it ensures that the solution can be managed more effectively, maintaining safer laboratory practices.
add a chemical.
NO
to make it diluted
To dilute it.
Yes
When you add a base to an acid, they undergo a neutralization reaction to form water and a salt. The general chemical formula for this reaction is: acid + base → salt + water
You could add sodium to water.
You need to replace the water that evaporates.
Yes, chemical weathering typically involves water as a key component. Water facilitates chemical reactions between minerals and other substances, leading to the breakdown and alteration of rocks over time.
Neutralization always produces water, H2O (the 2 is actually a sub-script).
When mixing acid and water, always add the acid to the water, and add it slowly. Never add the water to the acid.
Naturally water is chemical free. The only way it could have chemicals is if you add them yourself.