I think the cathode will be coated in silver.
It could be done by electrolysis of a molten solution of NaCl, (not a dilute solution).
No reaction.
Dilute sulphuric acid! I got stuck on this question but now I know the answer! Tell me if this helps!
The li mit t est for chloride is mainly used to control chloride impurity in the pharmaceutical material, depends upon the precipitation of chloride with silver nitrate in presence of nitric acid and comparison of precipitation produced in the sample with that of standard solution containing a known amount of chloride ion.
Blood clot due to ferric chloride in vessels, reason is ferric chloride damage endothelial wall and expose phospholipid layer which induce palates aggregation and activate blood clotting cascade. Amit Kumar Srivastava, Senior Research Fellow
Usually hydrogen will evolve from the cathode and oxygen from the anode, but if zinc is the anode, it may dissolve to produce zinc ions in the solution either instead of or along with oxygen evolving.
It could be done by electrolysis of a molten solution of NaCl, (not a dilute solution).
In MOLTEN zinc chloride, At the cathode: Zn2+ + 2e- --> Zn(s) At the anode: 2Cl- --> Cl2(g) + 2e- In CONCENTRATED aqueous zinc chloride solution, At the cathode: 2H+ + 2e- --> H2(g) At the anode: 2Cl- --> Cl2(g) + 2e- (Zinc is not formed as it's Enaught value is very negative. Chlorine is still formed though.) In dilute (less than 5%) squeous zinc chloride solution, At the cathode: 2H+ + 2e- --> H2(g) At the anode: 2O2- --> O2(g) + 4e-
An electrolysis process is based upon movement and flow of ions. More is the solution dilute, more is the movement of ions and more is the conductance of solution. Thus, when the solution is dilute more copper ions flow to the electrode and get deposited there
Sodium chloride doesn't react with acids.
dissolve ferrous chloride in minimum hydrochloric acid and then dilute with water.
No reaction.
Electrolysis is the breaking up of a compound using electricity. In order for electrolysis to occur the compound must conduct electricity(i.e. have mobile charged particles to carry the charge! here, these are the ions produced when the sulphuric acid dissociates). To electrolyse sulphuric acid, two inert electrodes (e.g. carbon or platinum electrodes) are placed in the solution and connected to a battery cell or main supply of electricity. At the anode oxygen is formed and at the cathode hydrogen. The volume of hydrogen produced, is double the volume of oxygen. It is in fact the electrolysis of water! (ions present: (H)+, (OH)-, from the water, and (H)+, (SO4)2-, from the sulphuric acid. at the cathode, only (H)+ ions go, which turn into hydrogen! at the anode, both anions go, but only (OH)- is discharged, producing oxygen (and water), because the sulphate ion is more stable and so it's more difficult to lose its electrons)
calcium chloride +water
Dilute water solutions are neutral.
Sodium chloride (and other compounds) are diluted only if it is necessary, this depends on each application.
You would need 999,999L of water to dilute used copper chloride solution