One possible reaction is 2 NaOH + H3PO4 = Na2HPO4 + 2 H2O.
No. Na2HPO4 is only a monobasic acid, corresponding to the remaining hydrogen atom. This is a very weak acid.
This equation is:HBr + LiOH = LiBr + H2O
The balanced reaction of LiOH + CO2 to produce Li2CO3 + H2O is as follows. 2 LiOH + CO2 --> Li2CO3 + H2O.
Use equimolar quantities: LiOH + HC2H3O2 (acetic acid) --> C2H3O2- (acetate) + Li+ + H2O
I believe it is already balanced. No coefficients neccessary
LiOH
CaCl2 + Na2HPo4 = @NaCl + CaHPO4
Na2HPO4 is disodium phosphate or disodium hydrogen phosphate.
Balanced equation: LiOH + HBr ---> LiBr + H₂O Here, we aim to convert the mass of LiOH to mass of LiBr. In this formula, the product (LiBr) takes x, and the reactant (LiOH) takes y. Here's how it goes. (? = coefficient in the balanced equation) mass of x = (mole of y) * (? mol x / ? mol y) * (molar mass of x) mass of LiBr = (10 g / 23.95 g/mol) * (1 mol LiBr / 1 mol LiOH) * (86.85 g/mol LiBr) mass of LiBr = 36.3 g (Answer)
lioh
Yes, LiOH is a compound.
LiOH is lithium hydroxide.
LiOH + H2O --> Li+ + OH-
The conjugate acid of LiOH is considered Li+.
One possible reaction is 2 NaOH + H3PO4 = Na2HPO4 + 2 H2O.
No. Na2HPO4 is only a monobasic acid, corresponding to the remaining hydrogen atom. This is a very weak acid.