Sodium chloride is very soluble in water: 360,9 g/L at 20 0C.
NaCl is a soluble compound because salts with Group I elements are soluble as well as halide salts (Cl).
No. Why? Because my chem lab book says so
The product is sodium chloride.The reaction is:NaOH + HCl - NaCl + H2O
soluble
The reactants are NaCl and H2O. A becks: HCl NaOH
yes,it is soluble,as it makes sodium salt with NaOH.
That is correct: HCl(aq) + NaOH(aq) --> NaCl(aq) +H2O
Yes it is soluble because NaOH is nonpolar as well as Thymol being nonpolar
HCl is an acid which reacts with NaOH a base to produce H2O water and a salt - in this case NaCl HCl + NaOH = NaCl + H2O
Methoxyphenol is a phenol derivative and so, is soluble in water. This means that methoxyphenol will dissolve in an aqueous NaOH solution, but will not react with the NaOH.
NaCl
TiOCl2 + NaOH - TiO2 + NaCl + HCl
There is no NaCl2. It would simply be NaCl and the reactant would be HCl and NaOH. Thus,HCl + NaOH ==> NaCl + H2O
HCl + NaOH ==> NaCl + H2O