Barium Cholride and sulphuric acid create a white precipitate, videos of the reaction is on this website http://jchemed.chem.wisc.edu/jcesoft/CCA/CCA4/MAIN/BACL/PAGE1.HTM
Barium Chloride (BaCl2) cannot react with Hydrogen Sulfate (HSO4 -) by themselves because it cannot be balanced, but it can react with Sulfuric Acid (H2SO4) and produce Barium Sufate (BaSO4) and Hydrochloric Acid (HCl).
This is a double-replacement precipitation reaction. (I'm assuming that all reactants are at first in aqueous solution- the precipate(insoluble solid formed) is in bold is Barium Sulfate).
3BaCl2(aq) + Al2(SO4)3(aq) ---> 3BaSO4(s)+ 2AlCl3(aq)
OR if you prefer, the net ionic equation:
Ba2+(aq) + SO42-(aq) ---> BaSO4(s)
Ba2+ + SO42- --> BaSO4 (H+ and Cl- do not contribute)
white precipitate
It forms a white precipitate, barium hydroxide.
Barium chloride + sodium sulphate=barium sulphate +sodium chloride
OR
Na So + Ba Cl = 2 Na c2+ Ba So
2 4 2 4
Barium Sulfate and Hydrochloric acid
BaO2 + H2SO4 ----> H2O2 + BaSO4.
barium choride and calcium sulphate will form
The balanced chemical equation for Barium chloride plus Aluminium sulphate gives Barium sulphate Aluminium chloride is represented as .3BaCl2(aq) + Al2(SO4)3(aq) --> 3BaSO4(ppt) + 2AlCl3(aq).The ppt formed are white in color.
when barium chloride reacts with copper sulphate a double dispacement resction takes place,where: BaCl2(aq) + CuSO4(aq) --> BaSO4(s) + CuCl2(aq) The ionic equation is more descriptive: Ba2+ + 2Cl- + Cu2+ + SO4^2- --> BaSO4(s) + Cu2+ + 2Cl- The net ionic equation tells us that barium ions will always react with sulfate ions to make an insoluble product. Ba2+ + SO4^2- --> BaSO4(s)
sodium plus chlorine yields sodium chloride
a big lump of mess i dont think so copper sulphate +sodium hydroxide = Na2So4 +Cu(OH)2 WHICH IS SODIUM SULPHATE AND COPPER HYDROXIDE
barium chloride plus sodium sulphate yields barium sulphate plus sodium chloride
barium choride and calcium sulphate will form
The chemical equation is:Ba+ + 2 Cl- + 2 Na+ + SO4- = BaSO4(s) + 2 Cl- + 2 Na+
The insoluble salt barium sulfate is obtained.
No. They wont react with each other.
The balanced equation for sodium sulfate (Na2SO4) plus barium chloride (BaCl2) yielding barium sulfate (BaSO4) and sodium chloride (NaCl) is: Na2SO4 + BaCl2 -> BaSO4 + 2NaCl
Barium sulfate is much less soluble in water than either of sodium chloride and sodium chloride. When mixed, the solubility of the barium sulfate is exceeded. The barium sulfate then precipitates as fine solids, which remain suspended but scatter light to produce the milky look. Added: Na+ (sodium ion) and Cl- (chloride ion) don't react, Only Ba2+ and SO42- do so by forming precipitate: SO42- + Ba2+ --> (BaSO4)s
The balanced chemical equation for Barium chloride plus Aluminium sulphate gives Barium sulphate Aluminium chloride is represented as .3BaCl2(aq) + Al2(SO4)3(aq) --> 3BaSO4(ppt) + 2AlCl3(aq).The ppt formed are white in color.
Magnesium carbonate and sodium sulphate.
Barium chloride; BaCl2
when barium chloride reacts with copper sulphate a double dispacement resction takes place,where: BaCl2(aq) + CuSO4(aq) --> BaSO4(s) + CuCl2(aq) The ionic equation is more descriptive: Ba2+ + 2Cl- + Cu2+ + SO4^2- --> BaSO4(s) + Cu2+ + 2Cl- The net ionic equation tells us that barium ions will always react with sulfate ions to make an insoluble product. Ba2+ + SO4^2- --> BaSO4(s)
Barium chloride: BaCl2