Chemistry, asked by 6264, 11 months ago

Water react with hydrochloride acid

Answers

Answered by CuteRoshan
0
hey mate here ur answer



while water react with hydrochloric acid the solution process very exothermic........

hydrochloric acid is very strong acid.......




I hope it's will help you
Answered by Rajeshkumare
0
Hydrochloric acid or muriatic acid is a colorless inorganic chemical system with the formula H
2O:HCl. Hydrochloric acid has a distinctive pungent smell. It is classified as strongly acidic and can attack the skin over a wide composition range, since the hydrogen chloride practically dissociates completely in solution.

Hydrochloric acid









NamesOther names

Muriatic acid

Spirits of salt
Hydronium chloride
Chlorhydric Acid

Identifiers

CAS Number

7647-01-0 

ChEMBL

ChEMBL1231821 

ChemSpider

307 

ECHA InfoCard100.210.665EC Number231-595-7E numberE507 (acidity regulators, ...)

PubChem CID

313

UNII

QTT17582CB 

UN number1789Properties

Chemical formula

HCl(aq)AppearanceColorless, transparent liquidMelting pointConcentration-dependent – see tableBoiling pointConcentration-dependent – see tablelog P0.00[ Acidity (pKa)−5.9 (HCl gas) ]






ACID

Related compounds

Related compounds

Hydrofluoric acid

Hydrobromic acid

Hydroiodic acid



Structure and
properties





Hydrochloric acid is the simplest chlorine-based acid system containing water. It is a solution of hydrogen chloride and water, and a variety of other chemical species, including hydronium and chloride ions. It is an important chemical reagent and industrial chemical, used in the production of polyvinyl chloride for plastic. In households, diluted hydrochloric acid is often used as a descaling agent. In the food industry, hydrochloric acid is used as a food additive and in the production of gelatin. Hydrochloric acid is also used in leather processing.

Hydrochloric acid was discovered by the alchemist Jabir ibn Hayyan around the year 800 AD.bIt was historically called acidum salis and spirits of salt because it was produced from rock salt and "green vitriol" (Iron(II) sulfate) (by Basilius Valentinus in the 15th century) and later from the chemically similar common salt and sulfuric acid (by Johann Rudolph Glauber in the 17th century). Free hydrochloric acid was first formally described in the 16th century by Libavius. Later, it was used by chemists such as Glauber, Priestley, and Davy in their scientific research. Unless pressurized or cooled, hydrochloric acid will turn into a gas if there is around 60% or less of water. Hydrochloric acid is also known as hydronium chloride, in contrast to its anhydrous parent known as hydrogen chloride, or dry HCl.

Similar questions