Sufficient carbon dioxide would in theory douse the fire. Dry powder sodium bicarbonate is used in extinguishers this releases CO2.
Argon is a noble gas used as a shielding gas in welding, while carbon dioxide is a common gas used in various applications including fire extinguishers and carbonation of soft drinks. Argon is inert, non-reactive, and colorless, while carbon dioxide is a greenhouse gas and can react with other substances under certain conditions.
carbon dioxide is released carbonates react with acids
indeed it does my friend
Chlorine gas is formed qas the carbon dioxide will react
Yes. Even Bicarbonates also give out Carbon dioxide.
Yes, carbon can react with acids to form carbon dioxide gas and water.
Argon is a noble gas used as a shielding gas in welding, while carbon dioxide is a common gas used in various applications including fire extinguishers and carbonation of soft drinks. Argon is inert, non-reactive, and colorless, while carbon dioxide is a greenhouse gas and can react with other substances under certain conditions.
Acids produce carbon dioxide gas when they react with carbonates. This is due to the acid breaking down the carbonate to form carbon dioxide, water, and a salt.
Chlorine gas can react with carbon to form carbon tetrachloride (CCl4) or carbon dichloride (C2Cl4) depending on the conditions of the reaction. These reactions typically require heat or light to initiate the process.
Argon is chemically inert. It doesn't react with carbon.
carbon dioxide is released carbonates react with acids
No.
The gas is carbon dioxide (CO2). When sodium bicarbonate (NaHCO3) and citric acid (C6H8O7) react, they form carbon dioxide gas which is released as bubbles.
OYGEN
indeed it does my friend
When baking soda and vinegar react together, carbon dioxide gas is produced.
Carbon dioxide. It will smother the fire.