Virat
  • 1
Poll

When excess of carbon dioxide is passed through lime water, the milkiness disappears because

  • 1

Poll Results

0%A. water soluble calcium carbonate converts to water soluble calcium bicarbonate.
100%B. insoluble calcium carbonate converts to water soluble calcium bicarbonate. ( 1 voter )
0%C. water soluble calcium carbonate converts to insoluble calcium bicarbonate.
0%D. insoluble calcium carbonate converts to insoluble calcium bicarbonate.
Based On 1 Vote

Participate in Poll, Choose Your Answer.

Correct option – B. When excess CO₂ passes through limewater, the initially formed insoluble calcium carbonate (which causes milkiness) reacts further with CO₂ and water to form soluble calcium bicarbonate, clearing the milkiness from the solution completely.

cbse sample paper 2025 to 2026 class 10 with solutions

cbse sample paper 2025-26 class 10 with solutions pdf free download

Share

1 Answer

  1. Passing excess carbon dioxide through lime water initially produces a white precipitate of insoluble calcium carbonate, causing milkiness. On continued bubbling, carbon dioxide dissolves in water to form carbonic acid which reacts with calcium carbonate to yield calcium bicarbonate. Calcium bicarbonate is soluble in water, so the precipitate dissolves and the milky appearance disappears. Therefore insoluble calcium carbonate converts to a soluble bicarbonate on excess CO₂, explaining the clearing of lime water in this common laboratory demonstration today. Correct option – B.

    • 5
Leave an answer

Leave an answer

Browse