Yes, in this case you would have an aqueous solution of sodium chloride and acetic acid.
mixture-can separate
solution- hard to separate
so.....SOLUTION
Salt or sugar may be dissolved in water to form solutions.
yes
Acids release H+ in an aqueous solution.
0.17 Molar
No, they don't react with each other in aqueous solution and on heating nitrate becomes decomposed.
If you add an aqueous solution of sodium sulfate (Na2SO4) to an aqueous solution of hydrochloric acid (HCl), there is NO REACTION. So, yes, it is a physical change because you made solutions of the two reagents, but for no other reason.
basic
Yes.
Acids release H+ in an aqueous solution.
acid or acidic
0.17 Molar
Aqueous lead nitrate plus aqueous sodium iodide produce solid lead iodide and aqueous sodium nitrate.
Tell me what else is in the solution. Solution containing a liter of vinegar plus a tablespoon of salt--the vinegar is the solvent. Solution containing a liter of vinegar plus a thousand liters of water--the water is the solvent. (Solutes can be either solid, liquid or gas--oxygen, a gas; diethylene glycol, a liquid; and salt, a solid, all dissolve in water.)
Aqueous solutions contain polar or ionic solutes in solution; they do not scatter light; the sum of the volume of the solute plus the solvent (water) does not equal the volume of the solution; obviously they all contain water.
Just add it to the solution and the copper will precipitate out.
nah man. them acids has them lot. the H+ ions that is. but these basic solutions donate a massif amount of OH- ions compared to H+ ions when added to an aqueous solution.
because after you but the two things together you cant separate them
In an aqueous solution, the concentration of H3O+ is the same as the concentration of H+. If you know the pH of the solution, then that's equal to 10^(-pH).
No, they don't react with each other in aqueous solution and on heating nitrate becomes decomposed.