Yes. It can do that and still be an acid. HCl is a gas, for example. "Gas" just describes the energy of molecules compared to the "latent heat of vaporization". You can't have an acid that is in a plasma state... it dissociates into consitituent nucleii at that point.
1. React any metal except copper, mercury, gold, silver and platinum with any acid, H2 will be liberated. 2. Reaction of any hydrocarbon with steam will also liberate Hydrogen gas.
I am assuming you are mixing Magnesium and Zinc metals with an acid which would produce Hydrogen gas.
hydrogen gas is liberated when an acid reacts with a metal.The equation is as follows acid + metal=salt + h2
The magnesium will react with the acid to produce hydrogen gas and a magnesium salt.
By definition metals above hydrogen should react with acids to produce hydrogen and a metal salt when mixed, but carbonic acid is a weak acid and it won't react as much like sulfuric acid.
I only know 3 metals that react with acids to produce hydrogen. They are Zinc, iron and magnesium. There are 3 acids which react with them: and It will produce hydrogen gas which is the lightest known gas and is flammable :)
Sodium will react with virtually any acid to produce hydrogen gas. However the heat produced by such a reaction usually ignites the hydrogen.
Hydrogen gas (H2)
An acid can produce hydrogen gas through a chemical reaction called acid-metal reaction. In this reaction, the acid donates protons (H+ ions) to a metal, which releases hydrogen gas (H2) as a byproduct. For example, when hydrochloric acid (HCl) reacts with magnesium (Mg), hydrogen gas is produced according to the equation 2HCl + Mg -> MgCl2 + H2.
Zinc is a metal that reacts with dilute sulfuric acid to produce hydrogen gas.
Metals such as zinc, iron, and aluminum react with sulfuric acid to produce hydrogen gas along with the corresponding metal sulfate salt. The reaction involves the displacement of hydrogen from the acid by the metal.
No.
hydrogen gas
When a metal neutralizes an acid, the metal reacts with the acid to produce a salt and hydrogen gas. The metal displaces the hydrogen ions in the acid, forming a salt compound and releasing hydrogen gas as a byproduct of the reaction.
No. An acid will produce Hydrogen has when reacting with most metals and carbonate dioxide when reacting with most carbonate minerals. Additionally, Nitric acid will produce nitrogen dioxide when reacting with copper.
If a substance reacts with a metal to produce hydrogen gas, it likely contains hydrogen ions (H+). This could indicate that the substance is an acid, as acids react with metals to produce hydrogen gas.
Sulfuric acid will react with magnesium and most other metals to produce hydrogen gas.