No. While sodium acetate will form an aqueous solution, the pure substance is not aqueous. If you want to annotate that it is aqueous in a chemical formula, you follow the substance with (aq) in this manner: NaC2H3O2 (aq)
The chemical reaction isȘCaCl2 + Na2CO3 = CaCO3 + 2 NaCl
SrCl2 (aq) + 2 AgF (aq) → SrF2 (s) + 2 AgCl (s)
Ca + 2HNO3 --> Ca(NO3)2 + 2H ...i think...?
Zinc sulfite has a low solubility in water.
An aqueous solution is brine; but aqueous solutions are not attracted by anions.
NaPO4 is aqueous NiCrO4 is not
No, NaPO4 is not balanced; the formula's for trisodium phophate (Na3PO4) or dihydrogen sodium phophate (NaH2PO4) are balanced in stead.
Sodium Phosphate, though the actual formula is Na3PO4
The balanced equation is: Zn(C2H3O2)2 + NaPO4 --> ZnPO4 + Na(C2H3O2)2.
The reaction is:2 HNO3 + Ca(OH)2 = Ca(NO3)2 + 2 H2O
yes it is. Anything that has NO3 is aqueous since there are no exceptions.
BeI2(aq) + Sn(NO3)2(aq) => Be(NO3)2(aq) + SnI2(aq)
2 HClO + Ca(OH)2 >> Ca(ClO)2 +2H20
2Ag(NO3)2+CaCl2 ---> 2AgCl +Ca(NO3)2
Yes. 2HCl + Ba(OH)2 --> BaCl2 + 2H2O
Here is the equation:Cl2(aq) + 2 KI(aq) ----> 2 KCl(aq) + I2(aq)
2HClO(aq)+Ca(OH)2(aq)-->Ca(ClO)2(aq)+H2O(l)