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Not only NaOH, can be any other compound that do not have any water molecule attached to it such as anhydrous CaCl2, Silica gel, anhydrous NaCl..
compound
NaOH
NaCl
The answer is 0,625 moles.
No, NaOH is a compound
The hydroxyl radical, as a free radical, is a separate compound and is not part of another compound. However, 'radical' is an archaic term for 'group', and when used in this context, the hydroxyl group can be found in alcohols e.g. ethanol.
Reactions are: 2Na + Cl2 = 2NaCl NaOH + HCl = NaCl + H2O
NaCl + H2O
First, its HCl, with a lowercase L, not HCI. The reaction is HCl + NaOH --> H2O + NaCl
The product is sodium chloride.The reaction is:NaOH + HCl - NaCl + H2O
The reactants are NaCl and H2O. A becks: HCl NaOH
Not only NaOH, can be any other compound that do not have any water molecule attached to it such as anhydrous CaCl2, Silica gel, anhydrous NaCl..
That is correct: HCl(aq) + NaOH(aq) --> NaCl(aq) +H2O
HCl is an acid which reacts with NaOH a base to produce H2O water and a salt - in this case NaCl HCl + NaOH = NaCl + H2O
Sodium chloride, common salt. NaOH + HCl = NaCl + H2O
TiOCl2 + NaOH - TiO2 + NaCl + HCl