No. Water vapour has the same chemical formula are liquid water. Essentially they are exactly the same thing in different states.
Dissolve into water and it actually reacts with the water to form H3PO4, phosphoric acid.
No, only limestone dissolves.
Manganese is a metal. It is not soluble in water.
When acids dissolve in water, they form positively charged hydrogen ions (H+) and negatively charged ions of the acid. For example, when hydrochloric acid (HCl) dissolves in water, it forms H+ ions and chloride ions (Cl-).
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, carbon dioxide (CO2) can dissolve in water to form carbonic acid.
Yes, carbon dioxide can dissolve in water to form carbonic acid.
Sulfur dioxide is a poisonous gas that can dissolve in water to form sulfurous acid.
Sulphur dioxide mixes with water vapour to form sulphurous and sulphuric acid.
Yes, it can to form carbonic acid.
in some rare cases it can transform into water (h20)
It dissolve in polar solvents.It dissolve well in water.
When carbon dioxide (CO2) dissolves in water, it forms carbonic acid, not a base.
Yes, acetic acid is miscible in water. This means that acetic acid can fully dissolve in water to form a homogeneous solution.
Dissolve into water and it actually reacts with the water to form H3PO4, phosphoric acid.
No, only limestone dissolves.
Yes, a strong acid will dissolve in water, undergoing a dissociation reaction to release hydrogen ions (H+). This is because strong acids completely ionize in water to form ions.