The chemical formula Bacl2 is for barium chloride. Barium chloride is an inorganic compound that is soluble. It has a solubility of 37.5g/ 100ml in water at 26 degrees Celsius.
No, its very soluble at least greater than 10 grams per litre
sodium carbonate and barium chloride react to form sodium chloride and barium carbonate Na2CO3 +BaCl2 -------> 2NaCl +BaCO3
An example of a reaction:Na2SO4 + BaCl2 - BaSO4 + 2 NaClBarium sulfate is a white precipitate.
Very hard to separate completely but you could mix the mixture with water the BaCl2 would dissolve in water while the CaSO4 wouldn't (much) Then filter off the remaining solid. The BaCl2 would be in solution and the water could be evaporated off. 99% of the CaSO4 would be separated out since BaCl2 is 100X more soluble.
No.
Yes, barium chloride (BaCl2) is soluble in water.
No, its very soluble at least greater than 10 grams per litre
BaCl2 is barium chloride, Na2CO3 is sodium carbonate, NaCl is sodium chloride BaCO3 is barium carbonate; the reaction is:BaCl2 + Na2CO3 = BaCO3 + 2NaClBarium carbonate is a water insoluble white precipitate.
The chemical formula of sodium sulfate is Na2SO4. The chemical formula of barium chloride is BaCl2. BaCl2 + Na2SO4-----------BaSO4 + 2 NaCl BaSO4 is a white, practically insoluble in water precipitate; this property is important in gravimetric analysis.
H2S is the chemical formula for barium chloride.
sodium carbonate and barium chloride react to form sodium chloride and barium carbonate Na2CO3 +BaCl2 -------> 2NaCl +BaCO3
An example of a reaction:Na2SO4 + BaCl2 - BaSO4 + 2 NaClBarium sulfate is a white precipitate.
Very hard to separate completely but you could mix the mixture with water the BaCl2 would dissolve in water while the CaSO4 wouldn't (much) Then filter off the remaining solid. The BaCl2 would be in solution and the water could be evaporated off. 99% of the CaSO4 would be separated out since BaCl2 is 100X more soluble.
286 (mol BaCl2) * 208.23 (g/mol BaCl2) = 59,553.78 = 59.6*103 g BaCl2 = 59.6 kg BaCl2
FeSO4+BaCl2=>FeCl2+BaSO4
BaCl2 is itself a compound. Its name is barium chloride.
BaCl2+K2CrO4--------->BaCrO4+2KCl BaCrO4 is a yellow precipitate.