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A balanced chemical equation must observe the law of conservation. There must always be the same number of the atom within the reactants and within the products. For example, in the reaction between NaOH and HCl: NaOH + HCl --> NaCl + H2O On both sides of the equation, I have 2 hydrogen atoms, 1 chlorine atom and 1 sodium atom.
When sodium hydroxide (NaOH) reacts with chlorine gas (Cl2), they undergo a redox reaction to produce sodium hypochlorite (NaOCl) and sodium chloride (NaCl). This reaction is commonly used in the production of bleach.
Na2O + H2O ---> 2NaOH this is a metal oxide (base) reacting with water to form an alkali
Cannizzaro reaction is:2 C6H5CHO + KOH = C6H5CH2OH + C6H5COOK
The chemical reaction is:H3PO4 + 3 NaOH + Na3PO4 + 3 H2O
The reactants are HCl and NaOH.
NaCl doesn't undergo a chemical reaction with NaOH, so you wouldn't be able to tell.
The reactants are on the LEFT side of the arrow; the products are on the RIGHT side of the arrow. Note: "Reactants"=what is reacting; what you are starting with. "Products"=something you create. Thus, hydrochloric acid and sodium hydroxide are the reactants in this equation.
Both have the same cation.
H2O + NaCl
A Double displacement reaction or Neutralization reaction
Yes
This neutralization reaction is:NaOH + HCl = NaCl + H2O
An acid-base reaction yielding a salt and water.
The reaction is:NaOH + HCl = NaCl + H2O
Copper hydroxide is the precipitate.
NaCl(s) + C2H5OH(l) --> NaOH(aq) + C2H5Cl(aq)