i think you are misunderstanding the concept of net ionic equation.
Iron III clhloride potassium hydroxide does not have a net ionic equation UNLESS you mean the reaction between those two
Fe(NO3)3 + KOH --> Fe(OH)3 + KNO3
Balancing the equation and including phases may help with figuring out the net ionic equation:
Fe(NO3)3(aq) + 3KOH(aq) --> Fe(OH)3(s) + 3KNO3(aq)
3K2OOCOO9(aq) + 2Fe(NO3)3(aq) = 6K(NO3)9(aq) + Fe2(OOCCOO)3(aq)
There isn't one, this is a non-reaction.
The eqnet ionic equation is HCN + OH- --> H2O + CN-
The chemical reaction is:NH4ClO4 + KOH ↔ KClO4 + NH4OH
Potassium hydroxide is an ionic lattice. It has two types of ions and namely they are potassium ions and hydroxyl ions.
H+(aq)+OH−(aq)→H2O(l)
NH4+ + Cl- + K+ + OH- --> NH3 + H2O + Cl- + K+ Since the question is not asking for the net ionic equation, spectator ions should be included in the ionic equation as well.
The eqnet ionic equation is HCN + OH- --> H2O + CN-
Water.
Hno3 + poh ----> h2o + pno3
2koh + h2so4 --> k2so4 + 2h2o
Ionic
The chemical reaction is:NH4ClO4 + KOH ↔ KClO4 + NH4OH
C_2_H_4_O_2_ (aq) + OH^-^ (aq) --> C_2_H_3_O_2_^-^ (aq) + H_2_O (l)
Potassium Hydroxide
Potassium hydroxide is an ionic lattice. It has two types of ions and namely they are potassium ions and hydroxyl ions.
H+(aq)+OH−(aq)→H2O(l)
total ionic equation (also known as the complete ionic equation) for the reaction of potassium carbonate with hydrochloric acid
H+(aq) + OH-(aq) --> H2O(l)