There is no such thing as KCIO3. That should be a lowercase L, not an I.
(all two-letter element symbols use a lowercase for the second letter)
That being said, KClO3 is Potassium Chlorate.
K = Potassium
Cl = Chlorine
O = Oxygen
3 = number of Oxygen atoms in the molecule
KCIO3 is nothing. KClO3 (with a lowercase L) is potassium chlorate.
CuSO4 - Copper Sulphate KCIO3 - NH4OH - Ammonium Hydroxide K2CO3 - Potassium Carbonate NA2SO4 - Sodium Sulphate KC2H3O2 -
HCN is an acid; KClO3 is a salt.
69. 00 g of oxygen
There is no such thing as KCIO3. That should be a lowercase L, not an I. (all two-letter element symbols use a lowercase for the second letter) That being said, KClO3 is Potassium Chlorate. K = Potassium Cl = Chlorine O = Oxygen 3 = number of Oxygen atoms in the molecule
To balance the chemical equation KCIO3 → KCI + O2, you need to make sure the number of atoms on both sides is equal. First, balance the potassium atoms by adding a coefficient of 1 in front of KCI. Next, balance the chlorine atoms by adding a coefficient of 1 in front of KCI. Finally, balance the oxygen atoms by adding a coefficient of 3 in front of O2. The balanced equation is KCIO3 → KCI + 3O2.
K=39.100 Cl=35.457 O3=48.000 total=122.557 %K = 39.1x100/122.557 %Cl = 35.457x100/122.557 %O = 48.0x100/122.557
KCIO3-MNO2 cannot comes in contact with the rubber stopper otherwise, or a severe explosion may result.
The actual formula is KClO3 (with a lowercase L) Balanced equation: 2KClO3 --> 2KCl + 3O2
The balanced equation for the reaction between potassium chlorate (KClO3) and potassium chloride (KCl) in the presence of oxygen (O2) typically represents a decomposition reaction. However, KClO3 can decompose into KCl and O2 when heated. The balanced equation for this decomposition is: 2 KClO3 → 2 KCl + 3 O2.
KClO3, or potassium chlorate, contains ionic and covalent bonds. The bond between potassium (K) and chloride (Cl) is ionic, as potassium donates an electron to chlorine, resulting in oppositely charged ions. In contrast, the bonds between chlorine and oxygen within the chlorate ion (ClO3) are covalent, as they involve the sharing of electrons.
What is 'kcio3' ??? If you mean ' KClO3'. Then it is potassium chlorate, which is a white crystalline solid at STP. It will give off oxygen gas it heated. NB When writing chemical formulae, single letter elemental symbols are ALWAYS written in CAPITAL letters. Two letter elemental symbols are always written ; first letter is a CAPITAL letter and the second letter is small/lower case. This is the recognised international standard, and as showen on the Periodic Table. Hence 'k' should be 'K' 'ci' should be 'Cl' 'o' should be 'O'. NNB the 'ci' could also be confused for 'Carbon (c/C); and 'Iodine (i/I)'. So clarity in your writing is important. '