jordehwa Posted April 4, 2010 Posted April 4, 2010 Hi i have a question about predicting the reactivity of an element with an acid. So i know that copper will not react with HCL but zinc will. I know this because i put the two elements in HCL and seen that copper wont react and zinc will. so my question is how can i predict if an element will react with an acid before i do an experiment. And please don't say look it up on google, thanks. Merged post follows: Consecutive posts mergedMaybe I didn't ask that right, so I will ask the same question a tiny bit different. So for example if i wanted to know if copper would react with acetic acid, hydrochloric acid, and nitric acid, how could i figure this out on the periodic table?
spookyjeff Posted April 28, 2010 Posted April 28, 2010 You can't really tell from the periodic table. You need to look at the activity series for metals. A metal will react with a Bronsted-Lowry Acid if the metal is more active than Hydrogen but won't proceed if the metal is lower. Your experiment was a fairly good one because it contained Zinc (A fairly reactive metal) and Copper (A relatively nonreactive one). This is for metals. Nonmetals are a bit trickier and it all depends on the conditions and what acid is being used as usually something more complicated than a single replacement is taking place.
jordehwa Posted April 29, 2010 Author Posted April 29, 2010 Thanks alot for answering me:-) that helps me alot, i knew it was something like that, but i could not find it, but i just typed in metal reactivity series and found it so thanks for the help.
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