Hydrochloric acid is the only term used for acid HCl
Hydrogen (H) is a chemical element, a gas, not a salt.
Because a salt is generally the product of a reaction between an acid and a base.
Zn(OH)2 + 2HCl = ZnCl2 + 2H2O
No, HCl is an acid.
no. its an acid
These derived salts are called chlorides.
Why HCL forms only one series of salts?
Chlorides are salts of the hydrochloric acid (HCl).
Because HCl react with bases, salts, oxides, metals, the solution has an acidic pH and HCl dissociate forming hydrogen ions, H+.
Because HCl react with bases, salts, oxides, metals, the solution has an acidic pH and HCl dissociate forming hydrogen ions, H+.
Salts are the products of reactions between acids and bases. Example: NaOH + HCl = NaCl + H2O
hydrochloric acid(name) or HCL(formula)
Salts are the products of a reaction between an acid and a base; a common example: NaOH + HCl = NaCl + H2O
Halogens occurs naturally as salts; an exception is HCl from volcanoes.
HCL produces the ions of the salts which are being dissolved in the acid and it dit NOT give any colour so only the metal part do it.
Salts are compounds obtained by the neutralization of an acid with a base; sodium chloride may be prepared from HCl and NaOH: HCl + NaOH = NaCl + H2O
The salt derived from HCl is named: chlorideEg. 'Sodium chloride' for NaCl (table salt)
Any group one salts; Ca, Sr, Ba salts; nitrate salts; NH4 salts; C2H3O2- salts; Cl, Br, I salts except AgCl, PbBr2, and Hg2Cl2; SO42- salts except BaSO4, PbSO4, Ag2SO4 and SrSO4; Group II carbonates are insoluble.