No. Iron chloride is a compound of iron and chlorine, nothing else.
The symbols for iron chloride plus hydrogen are: FeCl2 + H2.
The compound hydrogen chloride, with formula HCl.
It is a compound.
No, it is a compound
There is iron (II) chloride (ferrous chloride, iron dichloride). There is also iron (III) chloride (ferric chloride, iron trichloride).
Hydrogen chloride is not an element; it is a compound and has no atomic number!
There is iron (II) chloride (ferrous chloride, iron dichloride). There is also iron (III) chloride (ferric chloride, iron trichloride).
2HCL
Hydrogen chloride (HCl) is a chemical compound, an acid, not a reaction.
You most likely mean Fe3+. This is not a compound, it is a monotaomic ion of the element iron.Because it carries a positive charge it is not a substance in its own right but is a component of some ionic compounds.It is called the iron III ion.
Iron (II) chloride
Hydrogen chloride is a polar compound. Therefore it can act as a solvent to particular polar compounds.