It would come out to Ag^+ + Cl^- = AgCl
Remember solubility rules nitrate and Ca both are soluble therefore they are not in the final equation.
The Chemical Equation for aluminum and copper chloride is as follows: Al+CuCl=Cu+AlCl. You will have to balance it and put the charges where they belong, but that's the basic equation. Hope it helps!
Yes. A salt is an ionic compound and so dissolving (or hydrolyzing) it is a chemical reaction. An example with sodium chloride (table salt): NaCl (solid) -> Na+ + Cl- The charges on the products indicate that they are aqueous (in solution). Since the reactant breaks apart into it's products, this is a dissociation reaction.
Hydrogen Chloride is a covalent bond because the charges cancel each other out. Hydrogen is +1 and Chloride is -1.
Sodium is Na and Chloride is Cl and their charges balance out so it makes NaCl.
Molecular:Bacl2(aq)+K2SO4(aq)-->BaSO4(s)+2KCl(aq)Total Ionic:Ba+2(aq) + 2Cl-(aq) + 2K+(aq) + SO4-2(aq)-->BaSO4(s) + 2K+(aq) + 2Cl-(aq)Net Ionic:Ba+2(aq) + SO4-2(aq)-->BaSO4(s)The ionic equation would have the ionic charges of each compound/element/or whatever. Ba^+2 CL^- for the first.. etc. You do the 'criss-cross' method to determine the ionic charges, and write that into the equation.This is a double-replacement precipitation type of reaction.
Cl(aq)+Ag(aq)-->AgCl(s) *do not forget to writte the charges on the elements, Cl 1 minus
Calcium + Chlorine --> Calcium Chloride Ca + Cl --> CaCl Balanced Equation: Ca + Cl2 --> CaCl2 Calcium has a 2+ charge, while chlorine has a 1- charge. Therefore you need two chlorine ions to balance the charges.
The Chemical Equation for aluminum and copper chloride is as follows: Al+CuCl=Cu+AlCl. You will have to balance it and put the charges where they belong, but that's the basic equation. Hope it helps!
Yes. A salt is an ionic compound and so dissolving (or hydrolyzing) it is a chemical reaction. An example with sodium chloride (table salt): NaCl (solid) -> Na+ + Cl- The charges on the products indicate that they are aqueous (in solution). Since the reactant breaks apart into it's products, this is a dissociation reaction.
KCl + Ba(SO4) → NR (no reaction) Potassium and chloride don't react, and BaSO4 does not dissolve. Only the opposite reaction would take place: Sulfate and barium from other sources are precipitating to solid. SO4-2(aq) + Ba2+(aq) → BaSO4(s)
Because solid sodium chloride is not an electrolyte.
Because charges are mutually neutralized.
yes sodium chloride is held together by opposite charges .it exists as a lattice .
K+1 Cl-1
Hydrogen Chloride is a covalent bond because the charges cancel each other out. Hydrogen is +1 and Chloride is -1.
Sodium is Na and Chloride is Cl and their charges balance out so it makes NaCl.
Because the charges of sodium and chlorine are mutually neutralized.