We did a lab at school in which the antacid Eno, whose active ingredient is Sodium Citrate Na3C6H5O7, is dropped in hydrochloric acid and I need to determine the reaction. Our teacher told us that the sodium is not involved, and to do the reaction as if it did nor exist, leaving me with
C6H5O7(s) + HCl(aq) ------->
I am not sure how to react these two compounds. My initial thought was to treat it like a neutralization reaction, resulting in H2O and the remaining salt composed of Carbon, Chlorine, and hydrogen, but that certainly doesn't seem like a salt at all. I also thought of just adding the H from the acid to the citrate, but there is no real science behind that choice. Can anyone help me out?