Barium Hydroxide is a weak alkali which is not very soluble. If you try to neutralise it with dilute sulphuric acid you will get a precipitate of Barium sulphate. This means you won't be able to neutralise solid barium hydroxide just the solution. To neutralise either the solution or the solid use dilute hydrochloric acid.
Ba(OH)2 + 2HCl = BaCl2 + 2H2O
If you add carbonate ions CO3 2- to a solution of barium hydroxide Barium carbonate will be precipitated. Again carbonate ions (as in sodium carbonate solution) will not completely react with solid barium hydroxide.
2006-11-06 07:56:43
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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when you consider which you have x AND x² interior the equation someplace, this would properly be a quadratic. you decide directly to get it interior the form: ax² + bx + c = 0 So our equation is: x² - 7x + 38 = 5x + 3 We basically merely choose each and every thing on the left area of the equation, so enable's subtract 5x on the two aspects: x² - 12x + 38 = 3 Now we subtract 3 on the two aspects: x² - 12x + 35 = 0 we've a quadratic expression wherein a = a million, b = -12, and c = 35. There are 2 uncomplicated techniques of fixing. a million) Factoring: (x - 7)(x - 5) = 0 x = 7 or 5 2) Quadratic formulation x = (-b ±?(b² - 4ac)) / 2a = (12±?((-12)² + (-4)(a million)(35)) / (2*a million) =(12±?(one hundred forty four - one hundred forty))/2 =(12±?(4))/2 = (12+2)/2 or (12-2)/2 = 14/2 or 10/2 = 7 or 5
2016-12-10 03:41:27
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answer #2
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answered by ? 4
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You cant _neutralize_ Ba(OH)2 with carbonate ions. What you will form is BaCO3, which is a ppt. hydroxide ions will not be consumed, hence, cant be _neutralized_.
If you need to reduce the pH of the soln, try strong acids like HCl, H2SO4 and such. If you need to reduce the conc of Ba^2+, carbonate is a fairly good choice.
2006-11-06 07:14:32
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answer #3
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answered by nickyTheKnight 3
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Well, Barium Hydroxide is not very soluble, so adding something like Sodium Carbonate in aqueous solution will ppt it out, with sodium hydroxide left in solution, but the solution still has a high ph, so it is not neutralized.
Ba(OH)2 + Na2CO3 -------> BaCO3(ppt) + 2 Na+ and 2OH-
But if you are talking about adding CO2 gas to solid Ba(OH)2, you would form Ba(HCO3)2
CO2 + OH- ----> HCO3-
Ba(OH)2 + 2CO2 -----> Ba(HCO3)2 , which is neutralized but still gives an alkaline pH but not as high as the hydroxide.
2006-11-06 06:55:49
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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if u want to neautralize a base (BaOH) you should mix it with an acid.so you can do the following equation:
Ba(OH)2+2HCl -------> BaCl2+2H2O
also you can`'t mix it with CO3^-2 because ion is not found alone in a solution.be carefull
2006-11-06 06:59:09
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answer #5
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answered by reem h 2
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Barium Hydroxide is an alkali, Need an acid like sulphuric acid to neutralise.
Ba(OH)2 + H2SO4 = BaSO4 + 2 H20
or using Carbonic Acid as per your example
Ba(OH)2 + H2CO3 = BaCO3 + 2 H20
2006-11-06 07:00:04
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answer #6
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answered by Chris J 1
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To neutralize Ba(OH)2, which is a base, you need an acid. A carbonate salt is not an acid. However, CO2 is an acid:
Ba(OH)2 + CO2 ===> BaCO3 + H2O
2006-11-06 07:01:18
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answer #7
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answered by steve_geo1 7
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The carbonate is nonsense. You could do it with hydrochloric acid.
Ba (OH)2 + 2HCl = BaCl2 + 2H2O
2006-11-06 21:00:27
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answer #8
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answered by lykovetos 5
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BaOH+HCl -------> BaCl2+H2O
2006-11-06 07:01:38
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answer #9
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answered by Anonymous
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yea i reckon i would help you and i thought i could until i saw the question
2006-11-06 06:50:52
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answer #10
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answered by Anonymous
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