Yes because they are salt and hydrogen
It will form sodium chloride and sulfur hydroxide
It is Iron III hydroxide (thats the brick red precipitate). It forms as well sodium chloride which is soluble in the water of the reaction and therefore you do not see.
No reaction occurs.
Sodium chloride, common salt. NaOH + HCl = NaCl + H2O
Copper chloride + Sodium hydroxide --> Copper hydroxide + sodium chloride
Any reaction between sodium chloride and sodium hydroxide.
Any reaction between sodium chloride and sodium hydroxide.
Any reaction between sodium chloride and hydrochloric acid.
Sodium chloride is the product of reaction between sodium hydroxide and hydrogen chloride.
A chemical reaction occurs between sodium hydroxide and hydrogen chloride. Adding more sodium hydroxide to the reaction causes it to speed up. If you add more of a reactant, such as sodium hydroxide, can it be considered a catalyst? Why or why not?
It will form sodium chloride and sulfur hydroxide
Sodium chloride is the product of the reaction between sodium hydroxide and hydrogen chloride.
Any chemical reaction occur.
No reaction occurs; and salt is sodium chloride.
No, adding solid sodium hydroxide to neutralize hydrochloric acid (HCl) would not cause sodium chloride to redissolve. The reaction between sodium hydroxide and hydrochloric acid forms water and sodium chloride, which remains in its dissolved form. The addition of solid sodium hydroxide would simply further neutralize the acid and increase the concentration of the resulting sodium chloride solution.
It is Iron III hydroxide (thats the brick red precipitate). It forms as well sodium chloride which is soluble in the water of the reaction and therefore you do not see.
The chemical formula of sodium hydroxide is NaOH. The chemical formula of ammonium chloride is NH4Cl. Any reaction between these substances in water solution.