No. This equation is not balanced and does not even represent any reaction. The equation for the actual reaction between elemental zinc and chlorine is:
Zn + Cl2 => ZnCl2.
The Cl- ions in HCl is oxidized to Cl2
2Fe+3Cl2------>2FeCl3
I would tell, no reaction will occur the way the question has been asked.
its a non polar bond non polar bonds exist between two of the same element like Cl2 in this case
MgCl2 plus 2H20 produces Mg(OH)2 plus 2HCl
The balanced equation would be: MgBr2 + Cl2 ----> MgCl2 + Br2 Note: The equation is already balanced, both Cl and Br are diatomic elements they cannot exist alone as Cl or Br, they must be Cl2 and Br2. Also, this reaction happens because Cl is more active than Br, so it can displace it (halides activity series).
The Cl- ions in HCl is oxidized to Cl2
2Fe+3Cl2------>2FeCl3
Cl2 + 2NaOH ----> NaCl + NaClO + H2O or Cl2 + 2OH- ----> Cl- + ClO- + H2O
Single replacement. The F2 replaces Cl to form HF and Cl2.
First off, it is going to be NaCl, not NaCl2 and Cl2, not Cl. Secondly, the balanced equation would be H2 + 2NaCl -> 2NaH + Cl2
It is:2Na(s) + Cl2(g) → 2NaCl(s)(But remember in exams you should know this kind of method) Peace out, add me on BBM its:12b6a7d9
You have answered the question for yourself. Calcium + Chlorine = Calcium chloride. The BALANCED reaction equation is Ca(s) + Cl2(g) = CaCl2(s)
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I would tell, no reaction will occur the way the question has been asked.
Cl2 is a diatomic, single covalently bonded molecule. Cl-Cl
The original equation is Na + Cl = NaCl. The thing is, chlorine is one of 7 elements that doesn't like to be alone, so it's always 'Cl2', making the equation Na + Cl2 = NaCl. However, this is no longer balanced. So what you do is add a '2' onto NaCl, making it Na + Cl2 = 2NaCl. Now the chlorine is balanced, but the sodium isn't. After that, to balance the sodium, you add a '2' in front of 'Na' making the equation 2Na + Cl2 = 2NaCl.