Yes - white precipitate of Barium Sulfate
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
White precipitate will formed which is barium sulfate.
The barium ion in barium hydroxide and sulfate ion in sulfuric acid combine to form barium sulfate, which is insoluble in water.
A white precipitate reaction
The precipitate will be barium sulfate. The reaction is as follows:BaCl2(aq) + Na2SO4(aq) ==> 2NaCl(aq) + Ba(SO4)(s)
Yes, there will be a precipitate, which is barium carbonate.
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
Barium sulfate is the precipitate
since both substance will dissolve, the barium and the sulfate will come together and barium sulfate does not dissolve in water so barium sulfate will be the precipitate.
White precipitate will formed which is barium sulfate.
(NH4)2SO4(aq) + BaCl2(aq) → 2NH4Cl(aq) + BaSO4(s). Barium sulfate is the precipitate.
The barium ion in barium hydroxide and sulfate ion in sulfuric acid combine to form barium sulfate, which is insoluble in water.
yes!!
A white precipitate reaction
Barium sulfate is very sparingly soluble. Any addition of it to a solution containing sulfate or barium will almost immediately cause a precipitate to form.
A white precipitate of Silver Chloride is formed
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.