Many elements and compounds can react with hydrogen gas, such as oxygen to form water, halogens to form hydrogen halides, and metals to form metal hydrides. In general, hydrogen gas can react with many elements and compounds under the right conditions.
Magnesium is reactive with oxygen, water, and acids. It can react vigorously with oxygen to form magnesium oxide, with water to form magnesium hydroxide and hydrogen gas, and with acids to form magnesium salts and hydrogen gas.
indeed it does my friend
carbon dioxide is released carbonates react with acids
Mass (g) = Mr * Moles If you rearrange it, you get Moles = Mass/Mr Working with a 2dp periodic table you get: Moles = 2/1.01 =1.98 There are 1.98 moles of hydrogen in 2g of H2 gas.
Aluminum does react with fluorine gas (which is the most corrosive substance known to science).
Magnesium is reactive with oxygen, water, and acids. It can react vigorously with oxygen to form magnesium oxide, with water to form magnesium hydroxide and hydrogen gas, and with acids to form magnesium salts and hydrogen gas.
Lithium is a highly reactive metal, so it can react with many other ions, especially halogens such as fluorine, chlorine, bromine, and iodine
Many metals react with strong acids to produce hydrogen gas.
Bases can react with acids to form salts and water. Metals can also react with acids to produce hydrogen gas and a salt. Additionally, carbonates and bicarbonates can react with acids to form carbon dioxide gas, water, and a salt.
Sodium chloride doesn't react with oxygen gas.
Sulphuric acid is an acid, so many substances react with it. It will be impractical to list down all the things that would react with sulphuric acid as there are enormously too many! Examples are metals, metal oxides and metal carbonates.
nobel gas is a gas that cannot react with another gas
Acids can react with metals to produce hydrogen gas, not oxygen. When acids react with metals, they displace hydrogen gas from the acid.
Oxygen
Acids can react with metals (such as zinc or magnesium) to produce hydrogen gas. The acid reacts with the metal to form a salt and hydrogen gas is released as a byproduct of the reaction.
Metals react with acids to produce a salt and hydrogen gas.
Nitrogenis the gas you are looking for.This gas make's up most of the air, it dose not react much.A burning splint will go out in this gas.