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No - there would be a reaction though if Chlorine and Potassium Iodide were mixed
The compound is sodium chloride - NaCl (table salt).
Chlorine and ammonia react to form ammonium chloride which is a white crystalline solid, not a gas..
In inorganic chemistry, an aluminium gallium arsenide is a mixed arsenide of aluminium and gallium, used as a semiconductor.
Because Glucose is neutral and Sodium-Cloride electrically charged.
chloride Chlorine. Salt is Sodium Chloride (NaCl) my bobes
sodium and chlorine
No - there would be a reaction though if Chlorine and Potassium Iodide were mixed
The compound is sodium chloride - NaCl (table salt).
Nothing at all. The sodium is fully oxidised in sodium chloride and chlorine gas has no effect. +++ "... fully oxidised..." Really? There is no oxygen in the compound, which is simply NaCl.
No chemical reaction, only a solution containing ions of potassium, sodium and chlorine.
The element is chlorine Cl on the periodic table, it's called chloride when choline is mixed with another element eg: NaCl is sodium chloride - common salt
Chlorine and ammonia react to form ammonium chloride which is a white crystalline solid, not a gas..
When gaseous hydrogen and gaseous chlorine are mixed each other, they react vigorously to form hydrogen chloride (HCl). The only way to separate elements from the gas HCl is electrolysis where chlorine is discharged at cathode and the other at anode.
When NaCl is placed in water, the sodium and chlorine dissociate, giving you ions of chlorine which are negatively charged, and sodium ions which are positively charged. There is no reaction when sodium chloride is placed in water.
Chlorine doesn't explode when mixed with water. Pool water has chlorine in it. I think you meant sodium mixed with water, which does explode.
Because they form the compound Sodium Chloride NaCl which the human body requires in very small amounts. Sodium Chloride is poisonous if too much is consumed, especially by infants.