Yes, it is slightly acidic due to hydrolysis.
NH4Cl
Adding water dilutes the solution and will raise the pH of an acidic solution (which is to say, the solution becomes less acidic).
nh4cl breaks into ammonium hydroxide and hcl and for hcl is a strong acid the salt is acidic and in nacl case naoh and hcl are formed which are strong base and acid respectively so it is neutral
It is a white crystalline salt that is highly soluble in water. Solutions of ammonium chloride are mildly acidic.
No. NH4Cl is a salt, though it is weakly acidic.
NH4Cl
Ammonium chloride is a compound; water solutions are acidic.
Adding water dilutes the solution and will raise the pH of an acidic solution (which is to say, the solution becomes less acidic).
nh4cl breaks into ammonium hydroxide and hcl and for hcl is a strong acid the salt is acidic and in nacl case naoh and hcl are formed which are strong base and acid respectively so it is neutral
Assuming that the solvent is water, then NH4Cl (aq) is weakly acidic. This is because the Ammonium ion is Bronstead-Lowry acidic: it can donate H+ to give a neutral NH3 molecule. NH4(+) + H2O <----> NH3 + H20 + H(+) (Reversible reaction) If NH4Cl (ammonium chloride) is added to the solution, this will increase the concentration of NH4+. Since there is greater concentration of NH4(+), more H(+) ions will be released into solution, decreasing the pH, increasing the pOH, and thus making the solution acidic. Therefore a solution of any ammonium salt in water, not just ammonium chloride, is weakly acidic.
yes
It is a white crystalline salt that is highly soluble in water. Solutions of ammonium chloride are mildly acidic.
water.
The water solution of an acidic salt has a pH under 7.
An acidic salt has in water solution a pH under 7.
The temperature of the solution will decrease. The dissolving of NH4Cl in water is endothermic.
BaCO3 would be more soluble in an acidic solution than in the water