Sodium hypochlorite is dissociated in water.
to acidify the solution
To hasten chemical reactions.
Fluorides of sodium and potassium
Endothermic reactions need heat. Exothermic reactions give off heat.
When sodium hypochlorite is added in water it simply ionizes into Na+ and ClO-, if these ions react with water the products should be NaOH and HClO , but they again react as acid base and form the same ions in water.
to acidify the solution
To hasten chemical reactions.
It depends. If sodium bicarbonate is added to something in a chemical reaction, then it is a reactant in this case. If a chemical reaction forms sodium bicarbonate, then it is a product.
Atoms cannot be added or lost in a chemical reaction.
There is no reaction at all.
To hasten chemical reactions.
Fluorides of sodium and potassium
activation energy
Sodium fizzes in water because it is undergoing a chemical reaction with water to form sodium hydroxide. The result is more stable than either of the original chemicals. When sodium chloride is added to water both of these substances are stable with respect to each other and no reaction occurs that results in a new chemical product.
Endothermic reactions need heat. Exothermic reactions give off heat.
some chemical reactions take place when a chemical is added to a metal. sometimes the chemicl turns cloudy, it may fizz or a coat of black may appear on the piece of metal. hope this helps! :)
Energy must be continuously added for the chemical reactions to take place.