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Potassium and chlorine react to form potassium chloride and it is an ionic compound.
Yes, the elements potassium and chlorine will react--very vigorously--to form the ionic compound potassium chloride.
potassium and chlorine
potassium chlorine
No, they will not
There are two elements in potassium chloride. One atom of potassium and one atom of chlorine react to form potassium chloride.
Potassium and chlorine react to form potassium chloride and it is an ionic compound.
Potassium + Chlorine --> Potassium Chloride (potassium plus chlorine arrow potassium chloride)
Chlorine is more reactive than bromine thus bromine is unable to displace chlorine to form potassium bromide.
Yes, the elements potassium and chlorine will react--very vigorously--to form the ionic compound potassium chloride.
potassium and chlorine
potassium chlorine
No, they will not
I'm guessing you meant KCl or potassium chloride.
The formula for potassium chloride is KCl. The elements found in KCl are potassium and chlorine.
Sodium chloride and potassium sulfate will not react.
No.