It actually reacts with AgCl to produce NaCl (which is soluble), and some Na3[Ag(S2O3)2]complexes which are also soluble in water.
Silver chloride (AgCl) is soluble in sodium thiosulfate (Na2S2O3) due to the formation of a complex ion [Ag(S2O3)2]^3-. This complex ion masks the Ag+ ions from AgCl, preventing them from recombining with Cl- ions, thereby keeping AgCl in solution.
The balanced equation is: Ag+ (aq) + Cl- (aq) → AgCl(s)
Salt (NaCl) is white, solid, salty, soluble in water, usually found in small granules, etc. Sodium (Na) is a silver/white, highly reactive alkali metal. Chlorine (Cl) is a greenish gas, and a halogen.
p-chlorophenol forms salt with a base which is soluble in water. Cl-C6H4-OH + NaOH = Cl-C6H4-O-Na+ + H2O
The symbol for sodium is Na. The symbol for chlorine is Cl.
Only the Ag+ and the Cl- ions will react to precipitated AgCl;Na+ and NO3- are tribuned (= stay unchanged in solution).Ag+ + Cl- --> (AgCl)s
slightly
slightly
The net ionic equation for the reaction is: Ag+ + Cl- → AgCl In this reaction, silver ions (Ag+) react with chloride ions (Cl-) to form solid silver chloride (AgCl).
Yes, salt (sodium chloride) is soluble in water, meaning it can dissolve in water to form a homogenous solution. Sodium chloride dissociates into sodium ions (Na+) and chloride ions (Cl-) when in water, making it soluble.
Sodium chloride is dissolved and dissociated in water: NaCl--------------Na+ + Cl-
You think probable to sodium chloride and bromide.
The net ionic equation for silver nitrate and sodium chloride is Ag+ + Cl- -> AgCl(s). In this reaction, silver ions from silver nitrate combine with chloride ions from sodium chloride to form solid silver chloride precipitate. Sodium ions and nitrate ions are spectators and do not participate in the reaction.
Sodium chloride disassociates in water to produce Na+ and Cl - ions. NaCl + H2O = Na+ aq and Cl- aq.
The ionic equation for the reaction between silver nitrate (AgNO3) and sodium chloride (NaCl) is: Ag^+ + Cl^- --> AgCl (s) This equation shows the formation of insoluble silver chloride precipitate.
Table salt, or NaCl (Sodium Chloride) will dissolve in water.
1. Salts containing Group I elements are soluble (Li+, Na+, K+, Cs+, Rb+). Exceptions to this rule are rare. Salts containing the ammonium ion (NH4+) are also soluble.3. Salts containing Cl -, Br -, I - are generally soluble. Important exceptions to this rule are halide salts of Ag+, Pb2+, and (Hg2)2+. Thus, AgCl, PbBr2, and Hg2Cl2 are all insoluble.To answer your question, yes NaI is soluble
Ag+ + (NO3)- + Na+ + Cl- = Na+ + (NO3)- + AgCl(s)