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Calcium carbonate and sodium chloride are formed. CaCl2 + NaHCO3 = CaCO3 + 2 NaCl + H2) + CO2
It can be either, depending on the reaction. Sodium chloride is a product of the reaction of sodium hydroxide and hydrochloric acid. Sodium chloride is a reactant in the ion exchange reaction in a water softener to remove calcium from hard water.
Chemical: Vinegar contains the chemical, Acetic acid. Reactant: The limiting reactant weight was used to calculate the percentage yield of the product. Product: The product was nearly pure from just washing alone, following the reaction.
calcium oxide
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.
calcium chloride and water is a reaction
There is no reaction between them as they have same chloride anions.
Calcium carbonate.
Calcium carbonate (CaCO3) is insoluble in water.
Calcium carbonate and sodium chloride are formed. CaCl2 + NaHCO3 = CaCO3 + 2 NaCl + H2) + CO2
Chlorine is a product of the chemical industry; chloride (Cl-) is the anion of chlorine.
The reaction is: CaCl2 + Na2CO3 = 2 NaCl + CaCO3 The final products are sodium chloride and calcium carbonate.
Calcium chloride reacts with sodium carbonate to from sodium chloride and calcium carbonate. This is a double displacement reaction. Skeleton equation: CaCl2 + Na2CO3 -> NaCl + CaCO3 Balanced equation: CaCl2 + Na2CO3 -> 2NaCl + CaCO3
A chemical reaction occur and sodium chloride is the product.
For example the product of the reaction between sodium chloride and silver nitrate is the insoluble silver chloride.
Both ammonium nitrate and calcium chloride are salts, as they are ionic compounds that can be produced from an acid-base reaction. Neither is the salt we put on our food, however. Table salt is sodium chloride.
The product would be Triethylammonium Chloride.