There is no such thing as FeCl. There are, however, FeCl2 and FeCl3. Both of these are considered salts rather than acids. However, they do have some mildly acidic properties. The Fe2+ and Fe3+ ions can form coordinating complexes with water, which causes hydrogen ions to break away.
strong
FeCl is a metal (Fe) and a nonmetal (Cl), which means that it is a ionic bond.
what would happen if you added silver ion to FeCl-4
DMSO ligand. Check out www.chemweb.com for more info.
1.2 L
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FeCl+H2(g)
FeCl is a metal (Fe) and a nonmetal (Cl), which means that it is a ionic bond.
what would happen if you added silver ion to FeCl-4
compound by Samantha Sarah sylvester
Chemical compounds are not named in Roman numerals!
DMSO ligand. Check out www.chemweb.com for more info.
1.2 L
Halite is a mineral that is directly related to salts. Common table salt is mined and refined from the mineral halite.
2HCl + Fe → FeCl2 + H2 Hydrochloric acid + Iron → Iron (II) Chloride + Hydrogen gas
agcl (s) + Fe (s) --> FeCl + AG redox
Hydrochloride acid is hydrogen chloride or HCl. When HCl reacts with a metal, the metal replaces hydrogen in the compound, forming a metal chloride and hydrogen gas. Here's an example of zinc reacting to produce zinc chloride or ZnCl2. Zn + 2HCl --> ZnCl2 + H2