Chlorine reacts violently with a large number of elements.
The combination is a compound. These elements will react to form Sulfur Dioxide (SO2) upon contact between these two gases. Both gases react quite well with other elements, so they naturally react well with each other and form a compound.
According to Chemists, the elements of sodium and chlorine belong to the same atomic family as well as carbon and lead.
Well before they react with each other they have to find each other
Many gaseous elements form diatomic molecules: hydrogen, nitrogen, oxygen, fluorine, chlorine, as well as vapors of other elements not gasses under standard conditions like bromine, iodine, etc.
Answer#1Because gaseous chlorine (one of the most deadly elements) is likely to be released. Chlorine is extraordinarily damaging to the lungs and can cause pulmonary (of the lungs) chemical burns, as well as swelling of the lungs and fluid accumulation in the lungs (pulmonary edema) VENTILATE!Chlorine bleach should NEVER be used by or in the proximity of someone with asthma!
No because ammonia and chlorine gas react together, as well as ammonia and bleach. So in other words, you cannot produce a chlorine gas with something that is meant to react to it.
The combination is a compound. These elements will react to form Sulfur Dioxide (SO2) upon contact between these two gases. Both gases react quite well with other elements, so they naturally react well with each other and form a compound.
Mostly hydrogen, oxygen and carbon. There is some nitrogen, sodium, chlorine and various other elements as well, in small quantities.
Yes. Chlorine could sustain such a reaction as well.
It depends on the metal. Gold will react with other elements with great difficulty. There are gold compounds, but if you have a solid chunk of gold it'll basically sit there and do nothing. Titanium and aluminum are pretty reactive. Iron reacts pretty well with oxygen. At the far end of the scale, sodium goes out of its way to react with other elements.
It depends on the metal. Gold will react with other elements with great difficulty. There are gold compounds, but if you have a solid chunk of gold it'll basically sit there and do nothing. Titanium and aluminum are pretty reactive. Iron reacts pretty well with oxygen. At the far end of the scale, sodium goes out of its way to react with other elements.
According to Chemists, the elements of sodium and chlorine belong to the same atomic family as well as carbon and lead.
water; air && fire; Florine;
Neon cannot form compounds at all, because it is an inert gas that doesn't react well with other elements.
Well before they react with each other they have to find each other
Well, there are a few elements in ammonium chloride: NH4Cl * Nitrogen * Hydrogen * Chlorine
Normally, sodium and chlorine are the most common but potassium and chlorine is a "salt" as well. The common rule is that elements of the halogen family and the alkali family form "salt" compounds.