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Chlorine doesn't react with chlorine.
Yes. At standard temperature and pressure, magnesium in contact with chlorine will react to form magnesium chloride.
No.
Chlorine is the non-metal which is used for the purification of water
Xenon as it is a noble gas. Noble gases are inert and do not react with anything. Selenium is a solid Chlorine is a green coloured highly reactive poisonous gas. Carbon is a non-metallic solid.
Chlorine gas is formed qas the carbon dioxide will react
When carbon reacts with chlorine, the result is a covalent compound, specifically, carbon tetrachloride. And of course, all sorts of organic compounds can be chlorinated by partial or complete replacement of hydrogen atoms by chlorine. But the compound will never be ionic.
Cobalt react with oxygen, sulfur, fluorine, chlorine, carbon, nitrogen etc.
Curium is a sufficiently reactive metal; curium can react with oxygen, hydrogen, chlorine, iodine, fluorine, carbon, phosphorus, nitrogen antimony, arsenic etc.
Sodium and Chlorine form Sodium Chloride when they react. This is because the cation of sodium is added to the anion of chlorine.
The chemical formula for carbon and chlorine is CCl4 (carbon tetrachloride).
Chloromethane is the product that is formed when methane and chlorine react with each other. Dichloromethane is another product that can also be formed when methane and chlorine react.
Under the right conditions, chlorine will react with carbon monoxide to form phosgene gas, COCl2. This is unlikely to happen at the tailpipe of your vehicle since the reaction normally requires the presence of a catalyst such as activated carbon.
Chlorine doesn't react with chlorine.
Yes. At standard temperature and pressure, magnesium in contact with chlorine will react to form magnesium chloride.
No.
Chlorine is the non-metal which is used for the purification of water