Sodium chloride remain in the supernate.
When ammonium hydroxide and sodium chloride mix, they react to form ammonium chloride, which is a white solid precipitate. The dry ice (solid carbon dioxide) added to the solution lowers the temperature, which promotes the formation of the solid precipitate.
In a combustion test, chlorocyclopropane is expected to burn to produce carbon dioxide, water, and hydrogen chloride gas. In a test with alcoholic silver nitrate, a white precipitate of silver chloride is likely to form. With aqueous sodium hydroxide, a white precipitate of silver oxide will likely form, and in a reaction with magnesium metal, hydrogen gas will be evolved with the formation of a white precipitate of magnesium chloride.
When titanium dioxide is reacted with hydrochloric acid, titanium chloride and water are formed. This reaction typically produces a white precipitate of titanium chloride, while the excess hydrochloric acid remains in the solution.
Carbon dioxide reacts with lime water (calcium hydroxide solution) forming calcium carbonate as a white precipitate.
Sodium chloride is NaCl. Carbon dioxide is CO2.
Sodium Chloride (salt), Carbon Dioxide, and Water
the reaction between 2Al(s) +6HCL(aq) >>>> 2AlCl3( insoluble chloride) and 3H2(g) also a solid precipitate is formed by the bubbling of carbon dioxide into lime water
A positive test for carbon dioxide is the limewater test. When carbon dioxide gas is bubbled through limewater, it turns milky or cloudy due to the formation of a white precipitate of calcium carbonate.
The precipitate formed is Calcium Carbonate (CaCO3).
water bubbles White precipitate
A purple precipitate can be formed by mixing potassium permanganate solution with iron(II) sulfate solution. This reaction produces a solid manganese dioxide precipitate.
When baking soda solution and calcium chloride solution are combined, a white precipitate of calcium carbonate forms due to a chemical reaction between the two compounds. This reaction also releases carbon dioxide gas, which may cause bubbling or fizzing in the solution.