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Could anyone help?
Thank you.

2007-01-25 01:01:31 · 4 answers · asked by theseraphslayer 1 in Science & Mathematics Chemistry

4 answers

There's a whole bunch of gases that would make an acidic solution: any of the hydrogen halides (HCl, HBr, HI, HF). Bubbling sulfur trioxide (SO3) through water makes sulfuric acid, carbon dioxide (CO2) makes carbonic acid, nitrogen dioxide (NO2) makes nitric acid, . . .

Are there more specific choices you have?.

2007-01-25 01:17:18 · answer #1 · answered by Dave_Stark 7 · 0 0

There are several gases, which are the anhydride of an acid.

eg.
sulfur trioxide → sulfuric acid
sulfur dioxide → sulfurous acid
dinitrogen trioxide → nitrous acid
dinotrogen pentoxide → nitric acid
hydrogen chlorid → hydrochlorid acid
carbon dioxide → carbonic acid
....
and many more

2007-01-25 09:17:16 · answer #2 · answered by schmiso 7 · 1 0

Carbon dioxide gas that is percolated thru water will undergo a chemical reaction that creates carbonic acid. This isn't a very strong acid, but it is considered acidic.

2007-01-25 09:13:45 · answer #3 · answered by Jared Z 3 · 1 0

there's several
SO3
CO2
HCl

and the list goes on from there

2007-01-25 11:33:42 · answer #4 · answered by shiara_blade 6 · 1 0

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