With metal oxides...
Acid + metal oxide ---> salt + water
Most metal oxides are bases (a base is a substance that can neutralise an acid), this means they will react with acids to form a salt and water. If the acid is hydrochloric acid, the salt will be a metal chloride, if the acid is sulphuric acid, the salt will be a metal sulfate, if the acid is nitric acid, the salt will be a metal nitrate. For example...
hydrochloric acid + copper oxide ---> copper chloride + water
2HCl + CuO ---> CuCl2 + H2O
sulphuric acid + zinc oxide ---> zinc sulphate + water
H2SO4 + ZnO ---> ZnSO4 + H2O
nitric acid + copper oxide ---> copper nitrate + water
2HNO3 + CuO ---> Cu(NO3)2 + H2O
With metal carbonates...
Acid + metal carbonate ---> salt + water + carbon dioxide
The same with metal oxides, the salt produced will depend on the acid you use. For example...
hydrochloric acid + sodium carbonate ---> sodium chloride + water + carbon dioxide
2HCl + Na2CO3 ---> 2NaCl + H2O + CO2
sulphuric acid + calcium carbonate ---> calcium sulphate + water + carbon dioxide
H2SO4 + CaCO3 ---> CaSO4 + H2O + CO2
nitric acid + calcium carbonate ---> calcium nitrate + water + carbon dioxide
2HNO3 + CaCO3 ---> Ca(NO3)3 + H2O + CO2
A blog covering and explaining the Edexcel IGCSE Chemistry specification for the 2016 summer exams. If you are doing just double science, you do not need to learn the stuff for paper two, if you are doing triple you will need to learn all (GOOD LUCK!) I have separated the papers to make files easier to find. Hope it helps :)
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