h
NaOH + HCl -> NaCl + H2O Many do. This is the reaction between the strong base, sodium hydroxide (NaOH), and the strong acid hydrochloric acid (HCl). And as usual in these neutralization reactions the products are a salt, sodium chloride, and water.
YES, IT WILL CONTAIN AN ACID LIKE HYDROCHLORIC [Hcl]
Acids donate protons to solutions. HCl H + The proton donated. and Cl -
There can be several.As an example KOH+HCl produce KCl.
Yes -- salt and vinegar react to form sodium acetate and hydrochloric acid. NaCl + CH3COOH --> NaCH3COO + HCl
The polarity of a bond increases with the increment of the difference of electronegativity between the corresponding two atoms. Therefore HCl is most polar whereas HI is the weakest among the given.
Strongest---------------> Weakest HI, HCl, H2S, H2O According to MasteringChemistry.com
HCl (hydrogen chloride) has a covalent bond, polar.
An ionic bond
H-ClA single covalent bond between the hydrogen and the chlorine
Any bond between non-metallic elements where there is a difference in electronegtaivity gresaater than 0.25 would serve as examples. HCl, the OH bond in water. the P-Cl bond in PCl3.
The bond formed by chlorine is a single bond- e.g. in Cl2, in HCl
covalent
Nope.
HCl has an ionic bond.
HCl gas is a covalent molecular compound, HCl in water dissociates to form H+(aq) + Cl-
HCl has the polar bond. Another polar bond is H2O, or water. And all those bonds are polar in which two atoms have a difference of electronegativities between 0.5 and 1.7 and their dipole moment is not zero.