Can anyone tell me a acid base neutralization reaction which yields liquids rather than salts.???? Thank you.....
Yikes, not sure. Likely something with water.
Anyone else........... I am waiting....... All suggestions are welcome........
Research neutral oxides.
http://chemwiki.ucdavis.edu/Inorganic_Chemistry/Descriptive_Chemistry/Compounds/Oxides
Thanks @KinzaN .... that helped a lot......... anyone else. .... .... i would like to have options....
Guys check this out.... H2O + HCO3 = H2C2O3 + OH what do you think......... did this answered my question.???
this "H2O + HCO3 = H2C2O3 + OH" still produces a salt, bicarbonate will be introduced with a counter ion, like \(Na^+\), when the reaction occurs you'll still have a salt. \(H_2O + NaHCO_3 \rightleftharpoons H_2CO_3 + NaOH\) more importantly, the equilibrium lies far to the left side (\(OH^-\)is a stronger base), so this reaction wouldn't really occur.
I'm pretty sure that there any examples that don't involve the generation of a salt.
H2o + Co2 = H2co3 (acid) it is reversible....... and h2co3 + h2o = 2h2o + co2 awesome.........
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