this is the chemical symbol for hydrochloric acid(the stuff in your stomach
KOH + HCl -> KCl + H2O This is a neutralization reaction. You know because it produces water and a salt.
I don’t know
It can be found in the stomach...but i do not know how to produce it
really you dont know? well.....I dont either! blood is ment to sqeese through muscles then thats bad but thats wat i heard!
we know that hcl is an acid and acids change purple phenolphthalein to colourless. So HCL changes purple phenolphthalein to colourless
KOH + HCl -> KCl + H2O This is a neutralization reaction. You know because it produces water and a salt.
I don’t know
It can be found in the stomach...but i do not know how to produce it
really you dont know? well.....I dont either! blood is ment to sqeese through muscles then thats bad but thats wat i heard!
we know that hcl is an acid and acids change purple phenolphthalein to colourless. So HCL changes purple phenolphthalein to colourless
Does anyone know the answer to this question
8.3 grams HCl (1 mole HCl/36.458 grams) = 0.23 moles HCl ------------------------
Acid solutions are typically made in laboratories from commercially available acids which are supplied with specifications as to their physical and chemical properties including their concentrations. Calculations: For example, if you wish to use concentrated HCl that just arrived in your lab yesterday to make (say) 1N HCl, you will need to know the normality of the available solution. Suppose you know that it is 37% HCl (and all other information is missing); this means 37 mL HCl in 100 mL solution, M.W. of HCl = 36.5, Density = 1.185; 1.185 g HCl occupies 1 mL volume, 37 mL HCl corresponds to 43.84 g HCl. If the commercially available solution is 43.84 g HCl in 100 mL solution and you know that 36.5 g HCl in 1000 mL solution makes 1N (also 1M HCl) solution, then you have a 12N (also 12M) solution in your hands. So that means you must dilute it 12 times to get a 1N HCl solution. Titration: If you don't have a new solution at hand and are not sure about how correctly the HCl reagent was stored over many years, it would be prudent to measure the concentration of acid by titration provided you have fresh (reliable) base solutions at hand and reliable indicators.
This is how you write HCl (Hydrochloric acid) in water: HCl (aqueous) or short form HCl(aq)
The chemical formula (not symbol) of hydrogen chloride is HCl; for a diluted solution you can use "HCl dil." but this isn't a standard formula.
they both are same as HCl is a monobasic acid.>>>Not exactly. N stands for normal and M stands for mole. Knowing that, read this article to know the difference:http://answers.yahoo.com/question/index?qid=20070625100319AALNjoW
No its not to be balanced it would be CaO + 2(HCl) --> CaCl2 + H20