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Quick chemistry question (1 Viewer)

LoveHateSchool

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So I have written the general equation for the action of acid on a carbonate, but then it says;
Write this reaction as an ionic equation

It's probably obvious but please help?
 

muzeikchun852

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break up the equation. cancel off the one doesn't change (i.e. aqueous solution stays as aqueous solution) then you get your ionic equation.
 

K4M1N3

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In the initial overall equation, identify the transfer of electrons then complete an ionic equation for each species in the reaction.

for example: Zn(s) + CuSO4(aq) --> ZnSO4(aq) + Cu(s)

its two ionic equation would be:
Zn(s) --> Zn2+(aq) + 2e-
Cu2+(aq) + 2e- --> Cu(s)

NOTE how the number of electrons is equal for both equations, if not the eqution requires balancing.
 

LoveHateSchool

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^But what do I use to represent the metal, I don't know what it is? I'm essentially trying to write one to represent all acid action on a carbonate, not a specific example.

Thank you for the help thus far!
 
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