A solid-solid solution is not necessarily an acid, as an acid is a chemical compound usually with water and a pH measure less than 7.
No a solid solution of two metals is an alloy.
The use of aqueous solutions for the recovery of metals. Example: Leaching of copper oxide ores using a sulphuric acid solutions (or solution containing sulphuric acid). The Copper can then be recovered from solution using solvent extraction and electrowinning.
A solution containing either a weak acid or a weak acid its saltor a weak base and its salt?
A buffered solution
Each acid stronger than carbonic acid (pKa = 6.4) will react in solution of carbonate (CO32-) though from solid carbonates it might be difficult to dissolve.
The solution is used.
No. A solid-solid solution is called an alloy.
The use of aqueous solutions for the recovery of metals. Example: Leaching of copper oxide ores using a sulphuric acid solutions (or solution containing sulphuric acid). The Copper can then be recovered from solution using solvent extraction and electrowinning.
A solution containing either a weak acid or a weak acid its saltor a weak base and its salt?
A solution with a low pH (an acid) can dissolve certain metals.
A buffered solution
Each acid stronger than carbonic acid (pKa = 6.4) will react in solution of carbonate (CO32-) though from solid carbonates it might be difficult to dissolve.
Each acid stronger than carbonic acid (pKa = 6.4) will react in solution of carbonate (CO32-) though from solid carbonates it might be difficult to dissolve.
The solution is used.
No. An acid is a solution containing H+ ions
Yes. It is a solution containing sulfuric acid .
It can *form* a weak acid - it is solid carbon dioxide, which in solution is carbonic acid.
A strong acid solution (hydrochloric acid or sulfuric acid for instance) will dissolve most metals.