Science, asked by debo93, 6 months ago

on applying concentrated acid on water what will happen on temperature??​

Answers

Answered by Navinhater
3

Answer:

If you take a salt solution (like NaCl) on a plastic support and dry it, then as water evaporates, you get a concentrated salt solution and if the %RH is right, then salt crystals are formed. Can you do the same with acids like HCl (NOT sulphuric - it will absorb waster from air) or organic acids? I can't think of why you can't, but then what is the limit? I think you can get solid organic acids by driving all the water out - but can you do it for HCl to get like 10M HCl?

Answered by Anonymous
4

Answer:

Adding more acid releases more heat. If you add water to acid, you form an extremely concentrated solution of acid initially. So much heat is released that the solution may boil very violently, splashing concentrated acid out of the container!

Explanation:

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