Yes. If dissolved in water it will ionize, where the charged ions are able to pass on electricity.
CaCl2 itself is not an acid. However, its solution in water is acidic.
CaCl2 is a salt of a strong acid (HCl) and a weak base (Ca(OH)2).
Yes, I couldnt tell you why though. But I am positive that it is
It's not acid nor base. It is a kind of salt!
CaCl2 is a strong electrolyte.
It is a salt
Calcium chloride is a salt.
When CaCl2 is placed in water, CaCl2 dissociates, Ca+ and Cl- and ions conduct electricty.
1 mole CaCl2 = 6.022 x 1023 formula units CaCl2 1.26 x 1024 formula units CaCl2 x 1mol CaCl2/6.022 x 1023 formula units CaCl2 = 2.09 moles CaCl2
CaCl2 → Ca2+ and 2Cl-
For this you need the atomic (molecular) mass of CaCl2. Take the number of grams and divide it by the atomic mass. Multiply by one mole for units to cancel. CaCl2=111.1 grams7.5 grams CaCl2 / (111.1 grams) = .0675 moles CaCl2
CaCl2 + 2H2O --> Ca(OH)2 + 2HCl
This solution is an electrolyte.
When CaCl2 is placed in water, CaCl2 dissociates, Ca+ and Cl- and ions conduct electricty.
1 mole CaCl2 = 6.022 x 1023 formula units CaCl2 1.26 x 1024 formula units CaCl2 x 1mol CaCl2/6.022 x 1023 formula units CaCl2 = 2.09 moles CaCl2
2.430 moles CaCl2 x 110.98 g CaCl2/mole CaCl2 = 269.7 grams (4 sig figs)
The name of CaCl2 is Calcium Chloride
CaCl2 → Ca2+ and 2Cl-
Yes, CaCl2 will dissolve in water.
CaCl2 is Calcium Chloride.
It depends on what it's reacting with. If it's not reacting with anything, then CaCl2 makes...CaCl2.
Molarity = moles of solute/Liters of solution 0.320 M CaCl2 = moles CaCl2/4.5 Liters = 1.44 moles of CaCl2 1.44 moles CaCl2 (110.978 grams/ 1 mole CaCl2) = 159.81 grams needed so, considering the sigi figis, 160 grams needed.
NO!!! It is TWO(2) ionic bonds. CaCl2 = Ca^(2+) + Cl^(-) + Cl^(-)
No. CaCl2 is neither ans isomer, nor does it have isomers.