Salts dissociate because they are already ionized.
Acids and weak bases ionize in water.
KOH is a strong base
KCl is a salt
LiCl is a salt
HCl will ionize in water.
The salt lithium chloride is LiCl. It's an Li+ ion and a Cl- ion.
This is the chemical formula of sodium chloride.
Lithium chloride is a chemical compound
LiCl (aq) is a mixture of a compound and water. The LiCl can be separated from the water. All the other choices are compounds: LiCl (s), NH3 (g), NH3 (L).
LiOH + HCl -> LiCl + H2O This is an acid base neutralization reaction producing a salt, lithium chloride (LiCl ) and water.
LiCl is the chemical formula of of lithium chloride.
Formula: LiCl
LiCl
The salt lithium chloride is LiCl. It's an Li+ ion and a Cl- ion.
This is the chemical formula of sodium chloride.
Lithium chloride is a chemical compound
LiCl (aq) is a mixture of a compound and water. The LiCl can be separated from the water. All the other choices are compounds: LiCl (s), NH3 (g), NH3 (L).
LiOH + HCl -> LiCl + H2O This is an acid base neutralization reaction producing a salt, lithium chloride (LiCl ) and water.
You know because of solubility rules that LiCl disassociates 100% in water. So, knowing that molarity is equal to moles/liters Molarity LiCl = 1.97mol / 33.2 L Molarity = 0.059 M LiCl
Ionic compounds will dissociate completely as ions in water: LiCl (s) ---> Li+(aq) + Cl-(aq)
The chemical equation is:MgCl2 + Li2CO3 = MgCO3(s) + 2 LiCl
Sodium chloride and lithium chloride are very soluble in water.