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AgCl2
I think that there is no reaction, both of them are soluble. so they stay as the ions and cations in aqueous.
Silver chloride is a colorless aqueous solution.Added:AgCl is a quit insoluble, white precipitate, turning grayish black by reduction in visible light (photosensible reaction).AgCl will form a colourless, soluble Ag(NH3)2+ complex when dilute ammonia is added.
The reaction is:NaOH + HCl = NaCl + H2O
An aqueous mixture of zinc chloride and silver nitrate would be insoluble silver chloride. Water and oxides of nitrogen will also be produced during the reaction.
The white precipitate of silver chloride will dissolve when aqueous ammonia is added.
AgCl2
The chemical reaction isȘCaCl2 + Na2CO3 = CaCO3 + 2 NaCl
Nh3 + h20 <-> nh4+ + oh-
If the solution that may contain chloride ions is aqueous, adding a solution of silver nitrate will cause a precipitate of silver chloride. (However, there are many other insoluble silver salts, so that this test is not specific to chloride.)
No reaction occurs
Salts are obtained after the reaction of NH4OH with acids.
Aqueous ammonia is ammonium hydroxide NH4OH. When it is added to limewater which is actually calcium hydroxide Ca(OH)2 there will be no reaction.
The sample of aluminum chloride be treated with some ammonia(1:1)aqueous solution and filtered.To the filterate add a few drops of 2N HNO3, aqueous solution, followed by a few drops of 1% aqueous solution of silver nitrate. Appearance of curdy white precipitate soluble in dilute ammonia aqueous solution would indicate presence of chloride. Since aluminum chloride is quite covalent, the chromyl chloride test may not be very effective
Potassium and chloride ions.
we be it
no reaction occurs .. they just mix together.