Phosphorus reacts with chlorine to form
PCl3, phosphorus trichloride
PCl5, phosphorus pentachloride
P2Cl4 , diphosphorus tetrachloride
halogens react to form halides
SCl3. It is polar because it has a lone pair on the central atom.
You can mix them together (alloying) but these noble metals do NOT react, thus no bond is made
Radium react with halogens (F, Cl, Br, I), oxygen, nitrogen, water, etc.
mg p cl ar cr
Water doesn't react with sodium chloride; sodium chloride is dissociated in water:NaCl----------------------------Na+ + Cl-
P-Cl
halogens react to form halides
Al(3+) + Cl(1-) = AlCl3
K+ and Cl- react to form KCl (potassium chloride)
the f-p-f bond angle is 120the cl -p-cl bond angle is 180and the f - p - cl bond angle is 90
P-S , H-F, P-Cl
Na and K are both metals and do not react Na and Cl are metal and non metal respectively and will form ionic compound, NaCl or table salt or sodium chloride Mg and Li are both metals and do not react S and Cl are both non metals and will give covalent compounds
Calcium and chlorine react to form CaCl2, containing Ca2+ and Cl- ions.
silver nitrate (aqueous) will react with chloride to form silver chloride, a white precipitate.Net reaction: Ag+(aq) + Cl-(aq) --> AgCl(s)
Sodium and chlorine react each other to form sodium chloride, NaCl, which is an ionic compound.
p-br