Calcium chloride when mixed with ammonium and applied to the soil will increase the absorption of nitrogen by the plant increasing yield from 14 to 15%. This can be applied with a spread as part of the fertilization process.
2Na3PO4 + 3CaCl2 -> Ca3(PO4)2 + 6NaCl
CaCO3 + 2(HCl) = H2O + CO2 + CaCl2 so Calcium carbonate + hydrogen chloride yields water and carbon dioxide and Calcium chloride
0.80
2HCl + Ca give CaCl2 + H2 and lots of heat. It may explode. That is, hydrochloric acid and calcium give Calcium Chloride and hydrogen gas and heat. In practice, it would give Calcium ions and Chloride ions in solution. If you had exactly the right amount of each, you could then evaporate the water and have calcium chloride salt left over. The hydrogen bubbles out and is gone into the air (and eventually into space, lost to earth forever.) You could burn the hydrogen coming off, which would yield more water.
Silver chloride and sodium nitrate.
2Na3PO4 + 3CaCl2 --> Ca3(PO4)2 + 6NaCl
2Na3PO4 + 3CaCl2 -> Ca3(PO4)2 + 6NaCl
CaCO3 + 2(HCl) = H2O + CO2 + CaCl2 so Calcium carbonate + hydrogen chloride yields water and carbon dioxide and Calcium chloride
0.80
Yes. Ammonium salts such as ammonium chloride will react with a strong base to yield ammonia.
Yes, this can be thermodynamically explained.
The best way to answer this question is with an example. Using Calcium oxide reacting with hydrochloric acid, the reaction formula is: CaO + 2HCl ----->CaCl2 + H2O The molecular weight for Calcium Oxide is 56, for Hydrochloric acid is 26.5 and for calcium chloride 110. If you start with only 56g of Calcium oxide but say 10000g of hydrochloric acid, the maximum yield of the product calcium chloride can only ever be 110g. It does not matter how much hydrochloric acid is added. The limiting reactant in this example is the calcium oxide.
Percentage yield = (Actual yield / Theoretical yield) x 100% The percentage yield for a reaction is a value between 0 to 100 percent.
increase
2HCl + Ca give CaCl2 + H2 and lots of heat. It may explode. That is, hydrochloric acid and calcium give Calcium Chloride and hydrogen gas and heat. In practice, it would give Calcium ions and Chloride ions in solution. If you had exactly the right amount of each, you could then evaporate the water and have calcium chloride salt left over. The hydrogen bubbles out and is gone into the air (and eventually into space, lost to earth forever.) You could burn the hydrogen coming off, which would yield more water.
Silver chloride and sodium nitrate.
actual yield multiply by 100 = % yield theoretical yield