The conc of positive to negative ions will play some part. however, the main thing i'd imagine is the bulkiness of Al and Ca vs Na
the ion ratios are different,
1 mole CaCl2 = 6.022 x 1023 formula units CaCl2 1.26 x 1024 formula units CaCl2 x 1mol CaCl2/6.022 x 1023 formula units CaCl2 = 2.09 moles CaCl2
Only chemical formulas, not if they are reacting. Na2CO3 and CaCl2
CaCl2 → Ca2+ and 2Cl-
For this you need the atomic (molecular) mass of CaCl2. Take the number of grams and divide it by the atomic mass. Multiply by one mole for units to cancel. CaCl2=111.1 grams7.5 grams CaCl2 / (111.1 grams) = .0675 moles CaCl2
the ion ratios are different,
Ionic compounds are salts or oxides as NaCl, LiF, MgCl2, MgO, UCl4, ThO2, CsCl, CaCl2, FeCl3, AlCl3.
1 mole CaCl2 = 6.022 x 1023 formula units CaCl2 1.26 x 1024 formula units CaCl2 x 1mol CaCl2/6.022 x 1023 formula units CaCl2 = 2.09 moles CaCl2
Only chemical formulas, not if they are reacting. Na2CO3 and CaCl2
2.430 moles CaCl2 x 110.98 g CaCl2/mole CaCl2 = 269.7 grams (4 sig figs)
The name of CaCl2 is Calcium Chloride
CaCl2 → Ca2+ and 2Cl-
The real name of the element CaCl2 is calcium chloride.
To make CaCl2 and H2O, simply mix calcium chloride (CaCl2) with water (H2O). The calcium chloride will dissolve in the water, forming a solution of CaCl2 and H2O. The chemical equation for this process is: CaCl2 + H2O โ CaCl2 ยท H2O.
Yes, CaCl2 will dissolve in water.
It depends on what it's reacting with. If it's not reacting with anything, then CaCl2 makes...CaCl2.
The one that has the most particles or the most ions. For example, AlCl3 (4 ions) lowers freezing point more than CaCl2 (3 ions), which is better than NaCl (2 ions) which is better than glucose (1 particle).