No, but maybe the question was wrongly interpretable.
Better answering, according to this one:
Q.:
Sodium hydrogen carbonate reacts TO FORM sodium carbonate plus water plus carbon dioxide?
A.:
Yes, this will happen on (dry) heating or also in solution at higher temperatures!
2 NaHCO3 --> Na2CO3 + H2O + (CO2)gas
sodium hydrogen carbonate + stearic acid ----> sodium stearate + water + carbon dioxide:) I this helps!
Sodium hydrogen carbonate and nitric acid react to form sodium nitrate, carbon dioxide, and water.
Sodium Chloride (salt), Carbon Dioxide, and Water
Carbon dioxide.
Sulphuric acid reacts with sodium hydrogen carbonate to produce sodium sulfate, carbon dioxide, and water.
sodium hydrogen carbonate + stearic acid ----> sodium stearate + water + carbon dioxide:) I this helps!
Sodium hydrogen carbonate and nitric acid react to form sodium nitrate, carbon dioxide, and water.
No, that eq. does not contain Sodium which you mentioned as a product.
Sodium Chloride (salt), Carbon Dioxide, and Water
Carbon dioxide.
Sulphuric acid reacts with sodium hydrogen carbonate to produce sodium sulfate, carbon dioxide, and water.
Sodium hydrogen carbonate is used as an indicator of pH or as a test for the concentration of carbon dioxide. For the preparation of the solution see the link below.
sodium hydrogen carbonate provides carbon dioxide for the plant to photosynthesise
2 NaHCO3 = Na2CO3 + CO2 + H2O.
Im not sure which one it is, but its out of these four. 1. Copper oxide -> copper carbonate + carbon dioxide 2. Sodium carbonate -> sodium hydrogen carbonate + oxygen 3. Sodium hydrogen carbonate -> sodium carbonate + water + carbon dioxide 4. Calcium carbonate -> calcium + carbonate I hope this helps you, even a little bit. Haha, now i need to find the answer to this question!
They react, producing sodium chloride, carbon dioxide, and water.
THe gas is carbon dioxide. Remember the general acid reaction equation. Acid + Carbonate = Salt + Water + Carbon Dioxide.