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No - there would be a reaction though if Chlorine and Potassium Iodide were mixed
The reaction presumably is Cl2 + 2 KBr = 2KCl + Br2. The potassium chloride (KCl) is a salt.
The compound contains the two elements Potassium and chlorine it is an exothermic chemical reaction because it releases heat energy when formed.
chlorine plus potassium bromide gives bromine plus potassium chloride. Here is the symbol equation, but remember that the numbers AFTER the symbols should be subscripts. Cl2 + 2KBr = Br2 + 2KCl
Yes, the reaction is:Cl2 + 2 KBr = 2 KCl + Br2
Potassium chloride
No - there would be a reaction though if Chlorine and Potassium Iodide were mixed
no is not a chemical reaction
The reaction equation is: 2K + Cl2 --> 2KCl
This is a halogen single replacement reaction, in which the more active chlorine will take the place of the bromine in the potassium bromide. 2KBr + Cl2 --> 2KCl + Br2
Cl2 + 2KAt arrow 2KCl +At2 Chlorine + Potassium Astatide arrow Potassium Chloride + Astatine This happens because Chlorine is more reactive than Astatine so the chlorine displaces the Astatine to produce Potassium Chloride and Astatine.
Yes. The formula for potassium chloride is KCl, showing that equal numbers of atoms of potassium and chlorine are required to form the compound. The gram atomic masses of these two atoms are close enough that the given amounts of the two elements show far more than enough chlorine to complete the reaction. Therefore, the only product of the reaction will be potassium chloride, but there will be a considerable amount of unreacted chlorine remaining after the reaction is complete.
The reaction presumably is Cl2 + 2 KBr = 2KCl + Br2. The potassium chloride (KCl) is a salt.
The compound contains the two elements Potassium and chlorine it is an exothermic chemical reaction because it releases heat energy when formed.
No chemical reaction, only a solution containing ions of potassium, sodium and chlorine.
chlorine plus potassium bromide gives bromine plus potassium chloride. Here is the symbol equation, but remember that the numbers AFTER the symbols should be subscripts. Cl2 + 2KBr = Br2 + 2KCl
Yes, the reaction is:Cl2 + 2 KBr = 2 KCl + Br2