cl2 means chlorine, 02 means oxygen (2 oxygen atoms) h2 means hydrogen (2 hydrogen atoms)
in the reaction of H2 and Cl2 hydrogen is oxidised. Chlorine is reduced.
For 2HCl(g) ==> H2(g) + Cl2(g) the Keq = [H2][Cl2]/[HCl]^2
H2 +Cl2---------------->2HCl Since H2 and Cl2 react in 1:1 mole ratio the number of moles of H2 reacting is equal to the number of moles of Cl2 which is equal to 0.213
covalent bonds --- sharing electrons
The equilibrium constant, K_eq, for the reaction 2HCl(g) ⇌ H2(g) + Cl2(g) is equal to the concentration of H2 and Cl2 divided by the concentration of HCl squared, as products are in the numerator and reactants in the denominator.
The chemical equation is not balanced. It should be balanced as follows: H2 + Cl2 → 2HCl
hydrogen + chlorine = HCl H2 + Cl2 = 2HCl
Yes, this chemical reaction is correct. It shows the combination of hydrogen gas (H2) and chlorine gas (Cl2) to form hydrogen chloride gas (HCl) through a chemical reaction.
in the reaction of H2 and Cl2 hydrogen is oxidised. Chlorine is reduced.
The balanced equation is H2+ Cl2 --> 2HCl That is with a lowercase L, not an i.
For 2HCl(g) ==> H2(g) + Cl2(g) the Keq = [H2][Cl2]/[HCl]^2
Yes, HCl is a compound formed by the reaction of hydrogen and chlorine, so it has different properties from its constituent elements H2 (hydrogen gas) and Cl2 (chlorine gas). HCl is a polar molecule with acidic properties, while H2 and Cl2 are nonpolar molecules with different reactivity and chemical characteristics.
For 2HCl(g) ==> H2(g) + Cl2(g) the Keq = [H2][Cl2]/[HCl]^2
H2 +Cl2---------------->2HCl Since H2 and Cl2 react in 1:1 mole ratio the number of moles of H2 reacting is equal to the number of moles of Cl2 which is equal to 0.213
covalent bonds --- sharing electrons
The balanced chemical equation for hydrogen reacting with chlorine to form hydrogen chloride is: H2 + Cl2 → 2HCl.
The equilibrium constant (K eq) for the reaction 2HCl(g) ⇌ H2(g) + Cl2(g) would be [H2][Cl2]/[HCl]^2, where the square brackets indicate the molar concentrations of the respective species at equilibrium.