Yes, it is possible.
Magnesium hydroxide, a precipitate, is formed.
Calcium Chloride is a complete salt.There are no replaceble H+ or OH-.So it does not react with NaHCO3.So there is no change of mass.
The products formed are magnesium chloride and water.
Mix critic acid and sodium and bicarbonate
no reaction occurs .. they just mix together.
Add magnesium chloride to sodium chloride and mix.
you get magnesium bromine
Magnesium hydroxide, a precipitate, is formed.
precipitate
Calcium Chloride is a complete salt.There are no replaceble H+ or OH-.So it does not react with NaHCO3.So there is no change of mass.
Salt in water is sodium. Ringer's lactate solution (sodium lactate solution and Hartmann's solution), is a mix of sodium chloride, sodium lactate, potassium chloride, and calcium chloride in water. Sodium Chloride is a mix of sodium and chloride.
Mercury will not react with sodium chloride
Sodium and chlorine are the reactants. Sodium chloride will be the product
Acetic acid
When calcium chloride dissolves, it is rather exothermic (which makes it a good deicer for sidewalks). After mixing: the sodium and chloride ions will remain in solution and do nothing. The bicarbonate and calcium will react in a strange way. Ca2+ + 2 HCO3- → CaCO3 + H2CO3 As the calcium carbonate drops out of solution, the equilibrium of this reaction is further driven off to the right thus creating more carbonic acid. Carbonic acid easily decomposed to form water and carbon dioxide. H2CO3 → H20 + CO2 So, when you mix calcium carbonate and sodium bicarb, you get: Carbon dioxide gas, calcium carbonate solid, water and sodium and chloride ions.
carbondioxide (dry ice) and water form carbonic acid which would nutralize ammonium hydroxide however ammonium chloride is soluable and sodium bicarbonate is insoluable which precipitates out
Sodium chloride is the chemical name for table salt.