Since barium chloride is reactive with sulfate ions there would be more precipitate present. The solution with more precipitate present would show it had higher amounts of sulfate ions
The precipitate is the white barium sulfate.
precipitate of balium sulphate and solution of sodium chloride is formed!
The precipitate will be barium sulfate. The reaction is as follows:BaCl2(aq) + Na2SO4(aq) ==> 2NaCl(aq) + Ba(SO4)(s)
A white precipitate reaction
Because barium sulfate is a precipitate; barium chloride is soluble in water.
The question statement is true (except that the first instance, but not the second instance, of "dissolved" is misspelled.)
the precipitate is calcium sulfate (CaSO4) and its white in color
yes
precipitate of balium sulphate and solution of sodium chloride is formed!
The precipitate will be barium sulfate. The reaction is as follows:BaCl2(aq) + Na2SO4(aq) ==> 2NaCl(aq) + Ba(SO4)(s)
(NH4)2SO4(aq) + BaCl2(aq) → 2NH4Cl(aq) + BaSO4(s). Barium sulfate is the precipitate.
3CaCl2 + Al2(SO4)3 ---> 3Ca(SO4) + 2AlCl3 (calcium chloride and aluminum sulphate) (calcium sulphate + aluminum chloride)
A white precipitate reaction
Nothing - barium chloride is soluble. You can however precipitate either the barium (e.g. with sodium sulphate, giving barium sulpate, or the chloride, e.g. with silver nitrate giving silver chloride precipitate.
Because barium sulfate is a precipitate; barium chloride is soluble in water.
If both of the compounds named in the question are in solution in water, barium sulfate will precipitate. If both are solids when mixed, there will usually be no reaction.
The question statement is true (except that the first instance, but not the second instance, of "dissolved" is misspelled.)
Sulfide ion form a precipitate with iron ions.Halides ions form a precipitate with silver nitrate.Sulfate ions form a precipitate with barium chloride.Phosphate ions form a precipitate with calcium chloride.