hydrogen+ cobalt
HCl -> H+ + Cl-
HCl + H2O -> H3O + Cl- This can also be written as HCl -> H+ + Cl-
H - Cl H has 1 electron and passes this to Cl --> H+ Cl has 7 electrones and takes 1 from H --> Cl- to obtain an octet configuration
Think of water as HOH, which is basically a H+ ion and an OH- ion. So then, in solution, the reaction looks like this: Na+ + OH- + H+ + Cl- ----> Na+ + Cl- + H+ + OH- and then if we put the ions together, we get NaOH + HCl ----> NaCl + H2O.
The chemical equation is:Na + OH- + H+ + Cl- = Na+ + Cl- + H2O(l)
It is already balanced, you have the same number of H's and the same number of Cl's in each side of the equation.
HCl -> H+ + Cl-
HCl + H2O -> H3O + Cl- This can also be written as HCl -> H+ + Cl-
In solution acids do. Example. HCl (in solution)-> H + + Cl -
The chemical equation is:Na + OH- + H+ + Cl- = Na+ + Cl- + H2O(l)
H+, Cl-
H - Cl H has 1 electron and passes this to Cl --> H+ Cl has 7 electrones and takes 1 from H --> Cl- to obtain an octet configuration
Think of water as HOH, which is basically a H+ ion and an OH- ion. So then, in solution, the reaction looks like this: Na+ + OH- + H+ + Cl- ----> Na+ + Cl- + H+ + OH- and then if we put the ions together, we get NaOH + HCl ----> NaCl + H2O.
The chemical equation is:Na + OH- + H+ + Cl- = Na+ + Cl- + H2O(l)
H + Cl ----> HCl This is because H and Cl are both two molecules alone. It doesn't matter which way they collide because they have to collide with each other. In NO + O ----> NO2, you can collide with either the NO or the O side of the compound molecule.
The chemical equation is:Na + OH- + H+ + Cl- = Na+ + Cl- + H2O(l)
(H)++(Cl)- = (HCl)