Chlorine reacts with water to form a mixture of hydrochloric acid and chloric(1) acid. The word and symbol equations are below:
Chlorine + Water -> Hydrochloric Acid + Chloric(1) Acid
Cl2 + H2O -> HCl + HOCl
The chlorine and water form hydrochloric acid and hypochlorous acid by the following equation: H2O + Cl2 --> HCl + HClO
Yes. Chlorine reacts with water to form hydrochloric acid and hypochlorous acid.
Cl2 + H2O --> HCl + HClO.
Chlorine atoms do not combine with the water molecules, which, therefore, means that Chlorine doesn't react with water. That is why Chlorine is used in Swimming Pools.
Cleans it
Chlorine is highly reactive.
Metal oxides of high reactivity are soluble in water while those of moderate reactivity are insoluble in water.
Yes, chlorine is soluble in water.
Chlorine will easily oxidise most metals when exposed to them. Some, such as aluminium, may need to have their oxide coating removed first to show the effects of the chlorine - in this case, the reaction would be quite violent given the reactivity of both.
Chlorine doesn't explode when mixed with water. Pool water has chlorine in it. I think you meant sodium mixed with water, which does explode.
Chlorine is highly reactive.
reactivity.
chemical property
Group one, the alkali metals
An easy way of killing microorganism such as bacterias, we can either used chlorine or boil the water. With chlorine, due to its high reactivity its quiet effective and with boiling water, du to high temperature the bacterias will die off.
Reactivity is a term related to the aggressiveness (or not) of an element to combine with other elements. Oxygen, Chlorine, and Fluorine are among the most aggressive.
Copper has extremely low reactivity with water which is why it is used to make water pipes.
reactivity of water is a chemical property
Cl2 is rather reactive but F2 is far more the most reactive element, it even reacts with high-resistant glassware (can't keep it in a bottle) and with water.
No! Fluorine is the most "ignoble" gas, because it will bond to almost any other element, and chlorine is not far behind in its indiscriminate reactivity.
Metal oxides of high reactivity are soluble in water while those of moderate reactivity are insoluble in water.
because the k is the reactivity of similar chemical