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There would be no reaction because astatine is less reactive than bromine.
Sodium will react with chlorine to give you sodium chloride. Sodium will burn out. That means it is exothermic reaction. The argon is noble gas. argon will not take part in the chemical reaction or in the process of burning. Argon will act as a medium to dilute the chlorine. The end products will be same. The time to complete the burning will be little more, when chlorine is diluted with argon gas. This is just like carbon burning in the air and in pure oxygen. Carbon burns brighter in pure oxygen.
Sodium, Aluminum, Sulfur, Chlorine Largest---------------------->Smallest
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There would be no reaction because astatine is less reactive than bromine.
If you place elemental sodium and elemental chlorine together, yes you will have to add significant amounts of heat to catalyzed the reaction. This would also be extremely dangerous as elemental sodium is extremely reactive with water and elemental chlorine is toxic.
Sodium and chlorine are elements. If you mean one sodium atom and one chlorine atom yes they would be both isotopes but of different elemnts. If they were randomly sampled from nature the sodium atom would almost certainly be sodium-23 (there is only a trace of sodium-22 found in nature) and the chlorine atom would most likely be chlorine-35 as this isotope is about 75% of chlorine)
Sodium will react with chlorine to give you sodium chloride. Sodium will burn out. That means it is exothermic reaction. The argon is noble gas. argon will not take part in the chemical reaction or in the process of burning. Argon will act as a medium to dilute the chlorine. The end products will be same. The time to complete the burning will be little more, when chlorine is diluted with argon gas. This is just like carbon burning in the air and in pure oxygen. Carbon burns brighter in pure oxygen.
Firstly you have to go through two precursor steps before this can be achieved as putting sodium and chlorine together straight away isn't advisable.Sodium can be put into water to create sodium hydroxide and chlorine can be reacted with hydrogen to produce hydrogen chloride. These two reactants can then be used to create sodium chloride.2Na + 2H2O ---> 2NaOH + H2.H2 + Cl2 ---> 2HClNaOH + HCl ---> NaCl + H2ONotice that if you did add sodium and chlorine together in situ, then just by adding water to the situ mix, then the reaction could look to be self sustaining as long as you had enough sodium and chlorine. Therefore water would be considered as a catalyst for this reaction as it starts the reaction but it always returns to its original form, the classic definition of a catalyst.
Sodium, Aluminum, Sulfur, Chlorine Largest---------------------->Smallest
You would get Sodium Chloride and Bromine. This is because Chlorine is a more reactive group 7, (halogen), element that bromine, we know this because it is above bromine in the periodic table group, it is therefore more electronegative. When the reaction occurs, the Chlorine displaces the Bromine and the solution turns brown.
The product of a reaction with chlorine gas, Cl2, depends on the other reactant. Here are just a few examples of the many, many different possible reactions: A reaction between chlorine and hydrogen gas, H2, results in hydrogen chloride, HCl, which forms hydrochloric acid, the same acid found in the stomach, when mixed with water. A reaction between chlorine and sodium metal, Na, results in sodium chloride, NaCl, commonly known as table salt. Chloroform, CCl3, a chemical formerly used as an anesthetic, can result from a reaction between chlorine gas and methane, CH4. When mixed with sodium hydroxide, NaOH, chlorine gas forms hypochlorite, ClO3-, a major component of bleach.
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They combine to make sodium chloride, commonly known as table salt.
Sodium has an atomic weight of 22.99 g/mol. Chlorine has an atomic weight of 35.45 g/mol. NaCl has an atomic weight of 58.44 g/mol. Therefore 92g of sodium would yield 233.86g of sodium chloride (NaCl).