First of all, it's properly written NaCl, NaOH, HCl, HOH. NaCl is Sodium Chloride or table salt. NaOH is Sodium Hydroxide, a 14 on the pH scale (most basic). HCl is Hydrochloric acid, a 0 on the pH scale (most acidic). HOH is another way to write H2O (water), Makes balancing equations easier when you can see the two parts, H (hydrogen) and OH (hydroxide).
In acid base neutralisation, both the acid and the base react with each other to form salt and water. Ex: hcl+naoh --> nacl + hoh here, acid-hcl base-naoh salt-nacl water-hoh
The product is sodium chloride.The reaction is:NaOH + HCl - NaCl + H2O
The reactants are NaCl and H2O. A becks: HCl NaOH
HCl is an acid which reacts with NaOH a base to produce H2O water and a salt - in this case NaCl HCl + NaOH = NaCl + H2O
That is correct: HCl(aq) + NaOH(aq) --> NaCl(aq) +H2O
HCl + NaOH -----> NaCl + H2O
There is no NaCl2. It would simply be NaCl and the reactant would be HCl and NaOH. Thus,HCl + NaOH ==> NaCl + H2O
A base like sodium hydroxide (NaOH) combines with a acid (like HCl) to form a salt (like NaCl). Here is the equation NaOH + HCl = NaCl + HOH The Cation from the base (in this example Na which is the sodium ion) combines with the anion of the acid (in this case Cl which is the chloride ion) , leaving the hydrogen ion to combine with the hydroyl ion to produce HOH which is water.
The reactants are HCl and NaOH.
Think of water as HOH, which is basically a H+ ion and an OH- ion. So then, in solution, the reaction looks like this: Na+ + OH- + H+ + Cl- ----> Na+ + Cl- + H+ + OH- and then if we put the ions together, we get NaOH + HCl ----> NaCl + H2O.
HCl: hydrochloric acid NaOH: sodium hydroxide NaCl: sodium chloride H20: water or dihydrogen monoxide
Salts are compounds obtained by the neutralization of an acid with a base; sodium chloride may be prepared from HCl and NaOH: HCl + NaOH = NaCl + H2O