Lots of metals react with acids. It depends on exactly what acid, and the concentration of that acid. A mixture of concentrated nitric acid and hydrochloric acid (aqua regia, royal water) will react with gold and other precious metals.
The alkali metals will react readily with acid, as will most metals. You have to know that any metal with incomplete orbital has the ability to react with any proton donating species. (proton donating species are acids according to Bronston-Lowry theory)
Many metals reacts with acids forming salts.
hydrogen gas
Not necessarily. The rate at which a metal reacts with an acid does not necessarily indicate its reactivity. Some metals may react slowly with certain acids but still be considered reactive overall due to their ability to participate in other chemical reactions.
When sulfur reacts with a metal, a metal sulfide salt is usually formed.
Acids can react with metal oxides and metal hydroxides to form salts and water. This type of reaction is known as a neutralization reaction. For example, sulfuric acid can react with sodium hydroxide to form sodium sulfate and water.
This depends on the metal in reaction.
Zinc is the metal that reacts with acids and sounds like you're washing your hands (zinccing).
Many metals reacts with acids forming salts.
hydrogen gas
Hydrogen gas is produced when any metal reacts with acids. This is a common reaction that is often used to test for the presence of metal in a substance.
All alkali metals and alkali earth metals below calcium react vigorously with acids.
He is dumb the acid reacts with the metal causing to do diffrent things. alliminion in Hydrolic acid fiizzes and then dissolves !
Many metals react with strong acids to produce hydrogen gas.
Metallic magnesium reacts violently with acids.
When a metal is dipped in acid, a chemical reaction occurs between the metal and the acid. The acid reacts with the metal to form metal ions and hydrogen gas, leading to the dissolution of the metal. This reaction is often referred to as metal corrosion.
One metal that fits this description is aluminum. It reacts with acids to produce hydrogen gas, and its name sounds similar to the word "alum," which is often associated with cleaning products like alum stone used in dishwashing.
When an active metal reacts with hydrochloric acid, it produces metal chloride salt and hydrogen gas. The metal chloride is typically soluble in water and the reaction is accompanied by the evolution of hydrogen gas bubbles.