because it has ionic bond between ammonium ion and chloride ion.. the ionic bond is nondirectional , so a 3 dimensional lattice is formed....
Ammonium chloride is colorless.Ammonium chloride, as a solid, is white in color. It is highly soluble in water and solutions of ammonium chloride is colourless. The solid form also sublimes on heating.
The silver in the Silver Nitrate precipitates the chloride ions out of the ammonium chloride solution, leaving Ammonium Nitrate in solution and a Silver Chloride solid.
If ammonium chloride and sand are heated or undergo sublimation, ammonium chloride being a sublimable substance sublimes and sand is left behind as the residue.
If the silver nitrate and ammonium chloride are both in solution when mixed, the very sparingly soluble silver chloride precipitates as a solid, leaving ammonium nitrate in the solution.
Solubility of NH4Cl varies with temperature. At 0 degrees Celsius, the solubility is 29.7g/100mL in water.
Ammonium chloride is colorless.Ammonium chloride, as a solid, is white in color. It is highly soluble in water and solutions of ammonium chloride is colourless. The solid form also sublimes on heating.
Gently heat - ammonium chloride will sublime on a cold solid surface
ammonium chloride is moist
Solid, i think..
it is an ionic solid.
The silver in the Silver Nitrate precipitates the chloride ions out of the ammonium chloride solution, leaving Ammonium Nitrate in solution and a Silver Chloride solid.
One way is to slurry the solid mixture with water. The ammonium chloride will dissolve and the naphthalene will not. Ammonium chloride can then be recovered by evaporating the water solution of it that is formed.
Ammonium chloride is dissociated in water; after water evaporation the solid NH4Cl is reformed.
Add the mixture in water ammonium chloride is highly soluble in water while Barium sulphate is insoluble , filter the solution the residue(solid part) is Barium sulphate, evaporate the solution and get solid Ammonium chloride.
If ammonium chloride and sand are heated or undergo sublimation, ammonium chloride being a sublimable substance sublimes and sand is left behind as the residue.
If the silver nitrate and ammonium chloride are both in solution when mixed, the very sparingly soluble silver chloride precipitates as a solid, leaving ammonium nitrate in the solution.
- Dissolve ammonium chloride in water.- Add some crystals of silver nitrate and stir.- A white precipitate of silver chloride is formed.