None until you add it.
1 ppm HCl in aqueous solution would have a pH of around 6.
It would depend on how much you are dumping and where.
Citric acid has a specific gravity of 103.599825 pounds per cubic foot. Therefore one U.S. gallon would weigh 13.849275 pounds.
the thing that weighs a gallon is a gallon of WATER or a gallon of milk.
8 glasses of water a day is a gallon 64 ounces is a gallon
Yes. Hydrochloric acid and muriatic acid are the same thing. Muriatic acid is just the old name for it and isn't used much anymore.
No, vinegar is a solution of acetic acid. Muriatic acid is a solution of hydrochloric acid - much stronger acicdity. Don't make salad dressing with Muriatic Acid!
1 ppm HCl in aqueous solution would have a pH of around 6.
I tried both types of acid. The pH Minus (dry acid) and then the muriatic acid. I did not have much luck at all with the total alkalinity (TA) dropping with the dry acid. When I used the muriatic acid the TA dropped within a couple of days. So to answer your question I'd have to say the muriatic acid. It is much cheaper ($12 a case) at Leslie's Pool Supply and probably cheaper other places. The muriatic acid was also quicker and had better results.
It would depend on how much you are dumping and where.
About 12.95 for two jugs of it
2HCl + CaCO3 -> CO2 + H2O + CaCl2 You should probably refer to muriatic acid as hydrochloric acid, as this is a much more well know name for it, and also the IUPAC name.
Very small amounts of muriatic acid are mixed with water to lower the pH balance of the water and make it suitable for water pine trees. It is important to be careful and test the pH balance of the water because too much muriatic acid will kill the trees.
Gold is not a very reactive metal and muriatic acid would not have much effect on it, you probably need to Polish the scratches out if it looks dirty. or you need to check if it is real gold.
Muriatic acid, also known as hydrochloric acid, can be found in many common items, like household cleaners and swimming pool pH control products. The pH level of muriatic acid itself can fluctuate depending on its concentration and on the molarity of HCl in the aqueous solution, ranging anywhere from 0 to 7 on the pH scale.
Muriatic acid is considered concentrated Hydrochloric acid. At STP the maximum soluble concenration is about 37.5% HCl. You will usually titrate it to 36% HCl and as low as 34% HCl. Concentrated muriatic acid is always evaporating HCl gas and the concentration is always dropping. For most purposes like "pool cleaning" they cut it to 17% HCl and still call it muriatic acid. Muriatic should have 65% water by weight on average for the concentrated stuff and 83% water by weight for the weaker stuff.
NO You would need an awful lot of acid to do any harm there.