as the name suggests, you would need zinc.
Zinc Chloride is a ionic bond because Zinc a metal and chlorine a none metal. During a ionic bond there's a e- (Electron) transfer.
The answer is 1,15 g zinc.
zinc
Aluminum and zinc chloride when reacts, aluminum being stronger than zinc displaces it from the solution and takes its place resulting in aluminum chloride.
its makes Zinc Chloride + hydrogen
Zinc (Zn) and hydrogen chloride HCl)
Absolutely nothing: The magnesium is more reactive than zinc and hence it keeps hold of its chloride ion. If you were to add magnesium to some zinc chloride then there would be a reaction and you would end up with magnesium chloride and some zinc
Zinc Chloride is a ionic bond because Zinc a metal and chlorine a none metal. During a ionic bond there's a e- (Electron) transfer.
The answer is 1,15 g zinc.
zinc
Aluminum and zinc chloride when reacts, aluminum being stronger than zinc displaces it from the solution and takes its place resulting in aluminum chloride.
To make zinc powder from zinc metal, the zinc metal will have to be crushed.
Would not be meaningful in this formula. Zinc is only bivalent.
yes, with the formation of zinc chloride - ZnCl2.
you would get Zinc Chloride, a salt. This is because when you add a metal to an acid, you get a salt (plus some water, which just dilutes the acid)
Zinc and chlorine. ZnCl2.
its makes Zinc Chloride + hydrogen