No, HCl is a gas, though quite soluble in water (up to 720 g/L), which is called hydrochloric acid.
becoz HCL aqueous s has an ability to react with bases and it changes the blue litmus in to red colour hence HCL gas is noit an acid but HCL aqueous an acid.
Hydrochloric acid
This is how you write HCl (Hydrochloric acid) in water: HCl (aqueous) or short form HCl(aq)
The aqueous solution of HCl is the Muriatic acid so HCl gas is solute and water is solvent.
The balanced equation for the reaction between aqueous sodium hypochlorite (NaOCl) and aqueous hydrochloric acid (HCl) is: NaOCl + HCl → NaCl + Cl2 + H2O
becoz HCL aqueous s has an ability to react with bases and it changes the blue litmus in to red colour hence HCL gas is noit an acid but HCL aqueous an acid.
Hydrochloric acid
I think you must mean aqueous HCl, which is aqueous hydrochloric acid, meaning the hydrochloric acid has been diluted with water.
This is how you write HCl (Hydrochloric acid) in water: HCl (aqueous) or short form HCl(aq)
The aqueous solution of HCl is the Muriatic acid so HCl gas is solute and water is solvent.
The aqueous solution of HCl is the Muriatic acid so HCl gas is solute and water is solvent.
The balanced equation for the reaction between aqueous sodium hypochlorite (NaOCl) and aqueous hydrochloric acid (HCl) is: NaOCl + HCl → NaCl + Cl2 + H2O
HCl is ionozed in aq solution HCl + H2O = H3O(+ CHARGE) + Cl (- CHARGE) HCl FORMULA WILL REAMAIN HCl OT WILL BOT CHANGE
This is a solution of hydrogen chloride (HCl) in water.
If it aqueous, then it refers to hydrochloric acid and if it is a gas then hydrogen chloride gas
NaHCO3 (solid)+ HCl (aqueous) -> NaCl (aqueous)+ H2O (liquid)+ CO2 (gas)
Hydrochloric acid is an aqueous solution of hydrogen chloride (HCl) and water (H2O). The acid is a liquid matter.