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CuCl2+NaOH= Cu(OH)2+Na2Cl
Sodium chloride is NaCl because sodium (Na) forms the positive ion and chlorine (Cl) forms the negative ion and the two combine in a 1:1 ratio.
Well for sodium chloride, it would be NaCl
Phases are denoted with (s) (l) or (g) and aqueous solutions are (aq) ex: H2O(g) - water vapor H2O(l) - liquid water NaCl(aq) - aqueous sodium chloride NaCl(s) - solid sodium chloride
The metal ion - so, if you've got sodium chloride, you'd write sodium first (Na).
Potassium hydroxide is KOH. Sodium chloride is NaCl. A reaction doesn't exist.
Cobalt(III) chloride is CoCl3.Sodium hydroxide is NaOH.
NaCl
NaCl
The formula unit of sodium chloride is NaCl.
2Nao + Cl2 to 2NaCl
CuCl2+NaOH= Cu(OH)2+Na2Cl
Your question is not so clear; but: - liquid water - (H2O)l - water vapour- (H2O)g - sodium chloride as a solid - (NaCl)s
Very Carefully...
Well for sodium chloride, it would be NaCl
Sodium chloride is NaCl because sodium (Na) forms the positive ion and chlorine (Cl) forms the negative ion and the two combine in a 1:1 ratio.
Phases are denoted with (s) (l) or (g) and aqueous solutions are (aq) ex: H2O(g) - water vapor H2O(l) - liquid water NaCl(aq) - aqueous sodium chloride NaCl(s) - solid sodium chloride