C2H2O4 + 2NaOH -->> C2O4Na2 +2H2O
Oxalic acid + Sodium hydroxide -->> sodium oxalate+ water
B.Cu + 2NO3- + 4H+ → Cu2+ + 2NO2 + 2H2O
(COOH)2 + CaCl2 + 2NH4OH ----> CaC2CO4 + 2NH4Cl + 2H2O
The chemical equation is: C2H2O4 + 2 KOH = C2K2O4 + 2 H2O
H2C2O4 + 2KOH --> K2C2O4 + 2H2O
KCl is the chemical formula unit of potassium chloride not a chemical equation.
If your goal is to balance the equation, then yes, you have to chose the coefficients.
No because you always keep an equation in balance when solving it
K + Zn --> K + Zn These two metals do not form a compound. There is no reaction.
c6h120
The balanced equation is: KHCO3 + HCl -> KCl + CO2 + H2O The products of the reaction are potassium chloride, carbon dioxide and water.
3koh + h3po4 --> k3po4 + 3h2o ======================== ( site messing up again!! All letters capitalized )
2 KOH + H2CO3 = 2 H2O + K2CO3
first things first, i don't think KH(SO4)k(OH) with K(SO4)H2O is a real balancing chemical equation.
It is impossible to balance that equation.
is this equation correct? CH3CH2COOH + NaOH --> CH3CH2COONa +H2O
s + p =
2caoh + 2h2so4_2caso4 + 3h2o the equation is balance
When solving this type of problem, first use the ion charges to predict the formulas of the products. Then use coefficients to balance the equation. H3PO4 (aq) + 3 KOH (aq) --> K3PO4 (aq) + 3 H2O (l)
K2 O ..........i believe that this is it. Hope it helps :)
KCl is the chemical formula unit of potassium chloride not a chemical equation.
2 KNO3 ↔ 2 KNO2 + O2