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In CuCl, copper is in +1 oxidation state, So that is a d10 system and the d-orbitals are completely filled. Hence colourless.
The molar mass of copper chloride is 98.999 g/mol.
It decomposes to Cl2 and Cu there is another reaction as well. decomposes to CuCl(s) and 0.5Cl2(g)
(0.102gx1mole)/99g CuCl = 1.031x10^-3 moles
Copper Chloride (CuCI) makes up the blue element in Fireworks
Calcium Chloride, Cuprous Chloride/Copper Monochloride, Silver Chloride, Magnesium Phosphide
Copper chlorides (CuCl and CuCl2) can be obtained as very pure compounds.
The periodic table is an arrangement of elements and not compounds like CuCl. However copper chloride has two elements: copper (atomic number 29) and chlorine (atomic number 17).
Copper I Chloride is CuCl and Copper II Chloride CuCl2
Examples: CH4 and C2H6, CuCl and CuCl2, NaO and Na2O, etc.
There are two different copper chloride compounds, due to the two possible 'oxidation state numbers' (+1 and +2):CuCl cuprous chloride, Cu(I) chloride, mono-valent Copper chlorideCuCl2 cupric chloride, Cu(II) chloride, bi-valent Copper chloride
Probably Cu2Cl2 is a dimer of CuCl.
the element of CuCl would be Cu2Cl would be the answer.
Copper I Chloride is CuCl - Copper II Chloride (the most probable one) CuCl2
In CuCl, copper is in +1 oxidation state, So that is a d10 system and the d-orbitals are completely filled. Hence colourless.
Copper Chloride
CuCl