These compounds doesn't react.
When potassium chloride and silver acetate react, a double displacement reaction occurs. The potassium from potassium acetate and silver from silver chloride swap partners to form silver chloride and potassium acetate. Silver chloride is insoluble and precipitates out of the solution.
Yes, a precipitation reaction occurs when potassium chloride is mixed with lead(II) acetate. Lead(II) chloride, a white precipitate, forms in the solution due to the insolubility of lead(II) chloride in water.
The reaction between acetyl chloride and sodium acetate would likely result in the formation of acetic anhydride and sodium chloride. Acetyl chloride would react with the sodium acetate to form acetic anhydride, along with sodium chloride as a byproduct.
A double displacement reaction has occurred. The potassium and silver ions have swapped partners to form silver chloride and potassium acetate, respectively. This reaction is driven by the exchange of ions between the compounds.
The products of the double-replacement reaction between potassium chloride (KCl) and silver acetate (AgC2H3O2) are silver chloride (AgCl) and potassium acetate (KC2H3O2). This reaction occurs because the potassium ions (K+) in potassium chloride switch places with the silver ions (Ag+) in silver acetate.
Yes, when ammonium chloride reacts with calcium acetate, a precipitate of calcium chloride forms. Ammonium acetate, which is soluble in water, remains in solution.
The products of the double-replacement reaction between potassium chloride (KCl) and silver acetate (AgC2H3O2) are potassium acetate (KC2H3O2) and silver chloride (AgCl). This reaction occurs because the potassium ion (K+) switches places with the silver ion (Ag+) to form the new compounds.
When barium chloride reacts with silver acetate, a white precipitate of silver chloride is formed, along with barium acetate remaining in solution. This is because silver chloride is insoluble in water, while barium acetate is soluble.
When an aluminum acetate solution reacts with lithium hydroxide, aluminum hydroxide and lithium acetate are formed. Aluminum hydroxide is a white solid that precipitates out of solution, while lithium acetate remains in solution. This reaction is a double displacement reaction that forms a precipitate.
water and salt........or sodium acetate and water.....or NaCH3COO + H2O
The reaction you describe in words is: KCl + AgCH3CO2 → AgCl + KCH3CO2 This type of reaction is known as a "double replacement reaction" aka "double displacement reaction" aka "metathesis reaction." A double replacement reaction is a chemical reaction where two reactant ionic compounds exchange ions to form two new products compounds with the same ions. In this case the ions are K+ , Cl-, Ag+ and C2H3O2−. Note that potassium chloride (KCl), silver acetate (AgCH3CO2) and potassium acetate (KCH3CO2) are all quite soluble in water. Silver chloride (AgCl) is not particularly soluble in water (520 μg/100 g at 50 °C) and will precipitate out as the reaction occurs.
oxidation-reductionWhat type of a reaction occurs when a sodium hydroxide solution is mixed with an acetic acid solution?The answer above is wrong. The correct answer is acid-base neutralization