No reaction takes place. pH of the solution increase.
The following reaction occurs H2SO4 + 2NH4OH --> (NH4)2SO4 + H2OSulphuric Acid + Ammonium Hydroxide --> Ammonium Sulphate + WaterThis is a neutralization reaction.
It dissolves easily in water to form ammonium hydroxide solution which can cause irritation and burns.
Ammonia and sodium chloride are formed.
nothing happens. it becomes an aqueous solution of ammonium chloride
the answer is that you have to work it out your self .
The following reaction occurs H2SO4 + 2NH4OH --> (NH4)2SO4 + H2OSulphuric Acid + Ammonium Hydroxide --> Ammonium Sulphate + WaterThis is a neutralization reaction.
No.If you add ammonium chloride solution to potassium chloride solution all that happens is a solution with all the ions in it - ammonium ions, potassium ions, chloride ions and hydroxide ions.
In a weak solution, fizzing. In a very strong solution - run away.
When ammonium hydroxide decomposes, its ions are changed into two compounds. These two compounds are the same that ammonium hydroxide is formed from. Thus, ammonium hydroxide decomposes into water and ammonia.
It dissolves easily in water to form ammonium hydroxide solution which can cause irritation and burns.
nothing
HCl + NH3 --> NH4Cl is already exothermic Ammonium hydroxide is the solution of NH3 in water, giving the following exothermic reaction: [NH4OH]aq + H+aq + Cl-aq --> NH4+aq + H2Oliq + Cl-aq
Ammonia and sodium chloride are formed.
nothing happens. it becomes an aqueous solution of ammonium chloride
yup it makes ammonia
The silver in the Silver Nitrate precipitates the chloride ions out of the ammonium chloride solution, leaving Ammonium Nitrate in solution and a Silver Chloride solid.
the answer is that you have to work it out your self .