Lead
2K(I) + CuCl2 => 2KCl + Cu(I)2 The (I) is iodide, because the capital I and lowercase l look the same. This is a double replacement reaction, where copper (II) iodide comes out of solution, because it's not soluble, assuming that both of those are in solution.
Salt and baking powder (sodium bicarbonate) are both ionic compounds. Anything that is a metal and nonmetal bonded together is an ionic compound.
Potassium iodide is an ionic compound.
Sodium is a chemical element. Sodium chloride is NaCl but sodium is not a transition metal.
Yes! Sulfur and Chloride are both non-metals, so they form a molecular compound... not ionic (metal--non-metal)
Take a few drops of both samples and add some lead nitrate. A yellow precipitate indicates lead iodide and it gives the inference that it contains iodide ions, hence the solution of sodium iodide.
Both are salts, contain sodium and contain halogens (iodine and chlorine are halogens).
Neither, iodized salt is just a mixture of sodium chloride and potassium iodide (both neutral salts).
No. Copper chloride isn't an element, since it has both copper and chlor in it.
2K(I) + CuCl2 => 2KCl + Cu(I)2 The (I) is iodide, because the capital I and lowercase l look the same. This is a double replacement reaction, where copper (II) iodide comes out of solution, because it's not soluble, assuming that both of those are in solution.
Salt and baking powder (sodium bicarbonate) are both ionic compounds. Anything that is a metal and nonmetal bonded together is an ionic compound.
They are different ionic compounds, sodium chloride is NaCl, sodium iodide is denoted NaI. Both are soluable in water, though NaI is more soluable. They look quite similar as both are white crystalline salts. They are used for different purposes though.
Pectin has both soluble and insoluble properties.
Potassium iodide is an ionic compound.
Sodium is a chemical element. Sodium chloride is NaCl but sodium is not a transition metal.
it is both soluble and insoluble
Hydrogen and chlorine are both nonmetals, and nonmetals form molecular compounds when bonded together. Sodium is a metal and chlorine is a nonmetal, and a metal and a nonmetal form an ionic compound.