Polluted air contains oxides of sulfur, which dissolve in water to form stronger (more ionized) acids than the carbonic acid from which carbonates are derived. Therefore, the sulfuric and/or sulfurous acids formed by water and polluted air displace the carbonates as carbon dioxide, according to the ionic equation (for sulfuric acid):
CO3-2 + H2SO4 -> SO4-2 + H2O + CO2.
when their solution are mixed iron carbonate solid and solution of sodium sulphate is produced..
well here's a hint - copper sulphate is soluble in water, but calcium carbonate isn't.
Sulphuric Acid + calcium Carbonate = Calcium Sulphate + Carbon Dioxide + Water
2NH4+ + SO42- --> (NH4)2SO4
Copper carbonate + sulphuric acid = copper sulphate + water + carbon dioxide
Magnesium carbonate and sodium sulphate.
silicate, carbonate or sulphate
when their solution are mixed iron carbonate solid and solution of sodium sulphate is produced..
well here's a hint - copper sulphate is soluble in water, but calcium carbonate isn't.
The copper(III) carbonate is a precipitate.
Caledonite is a carbonate/sulphate mineral of copper and lead.
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Nope, Calcium is stronger then the iron so it keeps its hold on the carbonate
the answer is..... 2
No, they are two different compounds.
Barium sulphate to barium sulphate is NO CHANGE!
zinc carbonate + sulphuric acid = zinc sulphate + water + carbon dioxide