no,because it has a cloride ion and all clorides are soluble
An insoluble salt added to water remain as a residue at the bottom of the beaker.
yes!
The preparation of insoluble salt can be done by PRECIPITATION METHOD
CrCl3 is insoluble, unless it is in its hydrated form CrCl3*6H2O
Salts are prepared by a reaction between an acid and a base; the insoluble salt is a precipitate.
KCl is soluble. PbCl2 is insoluble. Test their solubilities in water.
PbCl4 is it's formula. The name of the chemical is Lead tetrachloride.
Precipitate forms when an INSOLUBLE substance is formed. That means you're looking for ions that form insoluble substances when combined with NaOH and LiCl. That means the ions below are all contenders (use the solubility rules): Ag+ Hg+ Pb2+ Note: PbCl2 is SLIGHTLY soluble in HOT water, but in standard conditions, PbCl2 is considered as insoluble. hope this helps.
no
An insoluble salt added to water remain as a residue at the bottom of the beaker.
Lead chloride (PbCl2) The equation is Pb(s) + 2HCl(aq) = PbCl2(aq) + H2(g)
A precipitate of lead(II) chloride, PbCl2. Lead salts are usually insoluble, the nittrate is an exception.
Yes
yes!
He was unable to complete the chemical mixture he intended because one of the ingredients was insoluable.
Put a little hydrochloric acid in the water sample. 2HCl + Pb -> H2 + PbCl2. Lead chloride is insoluble and its density is much higher than that of water. You can then perform a test on the precipitate to determine the ratio of lead chloride to silver chloride in your precipitate.
Mercury (II) chloride is soluble, but Mercury (I) (mercurous) chloride is insoluble. The formula of the first compound is HgCl2, and mercurous chloride is Hg2Cl2. Also, lead chloride (PbCl2) and Silver chloride (AgCl) is insoluble. All other chloride solutions are soluble.