This equation is: 3 BaCl2 (aq) + Al2(SO4)3 (aq) = 3 BaSO4 (s) + 2 AlCl3 (aq).
This equation is 3 BaCl2 + Al2(SO4)3 -> 3 Ba(SO4) + 2 AlCl3.
The balanced chemical equation for copper sulfate is: CuSO4 + H2O → CuSO4•5H2O
no reaction between ammonium sulphate and iron sulphate
Its NOT a balanced Equation ,but a FORMULA. Al2(SO4)3 NB A balanced equation is for two or more reacting substances and their respective products.
You wrote the wrong question. It should be: What is the balanced equation of ammonium sulphate from ammonium and dilute sulphuric acid? Well the answer will be (NH4)+1(S04)-2 which equals to (NH4)2 (SO4)
This equation is 3 BaCl2 + Al2(SO4)3 -> 3 Ba(SO4) + 2 AlCl3.
barium chloride plus sodium sulphate yields barium sulphate plus sodium chloride
CuSO4 * 5H2O
The balanced chemical equation for copper sulfate is: CuSO4 + H2O → CuSO4•5H2O
no reaction between ammonium sulphate and iron sulphate
Barium sulphate to barium sulphate is NO CHANGE!
Its NOT a balanced Equation ,but a FORMULA. Al2(SO4)3 NB A balanced equation is for two or more reacting substances and their respective products.
Let the fourmula for the hydrous copper sulphate be CuSO4XH20 where X represents the number of water molecules write a balanced equation for the heating of the blue copper sulphate crystals?
The balanced chemical equation for Barium chloride plus Aluminium sulphate gives Barium sulphate Aluminium chloride is represented as .3BaCl2(aq) + Al2(SO4)3(aq) --> 3BaSO4(ppt) + 2AlCl3(aq).The ppt formed are white in color.
The balanced chemical equation for this reaction is BaCl2 + Al2(SO4)3 -> 2AlCl3 + 3BaSO4. In this reaction, a double displacement reaction occurs where the cations and anions of the reactants switch partners to form the products. Barium sulphate, which is insoluble, precipitates out of the solution.
BaCl2 + CuSO4 = BaSO4 = CuCl2
No. Sodium sulphate + calcium = sodium chloride is wrong you can tell this by writing out a chemical equation NaSO3 + Ca = NaCl <-- This as you can see is wrong, in a chemical equation both sides must have the elements on each side, no new elements can be formed. I'm not 100% whether SO3 is a sulphate or a sulphite btw*