The empirical formula for aluminum chloride is AlCl3, and its gram formula mass is 133.34. The formula shows that each formula unit contains one aluminum atom, and the the gram Atomic Mass of aluminum is 26.9815. Therefore, 18(133.34/26.9815) or 89 grams, to the justified number of significant digits, of aluminum chloride will be produced.
(NH4)2CO3+2HCl=H2O+CO2+2NH4Cl ammonium carbonate+hydrochloric acid=water+carbondioxide+Ammonium chloride It can also form ammonium chloride and hydocarbonic acid
Methane could be used used for preparation of toluene but not directly. First, methane is reacted with chlorine to give chloromethane and that chloromethane is reacted with AlCl3 to form CH3+ and AlCl4- . This is reacted with Benzene(C6H6). This yields toluene as CH3+ replaces a hydrogen from Benzene.
Hydrogen Chloride gas --> HCl or Hydrochloric Acid --> HCl(aq)
Aluminum was discovered in 1825 by Hans Christian Ørsted, a Danish chemist, in a laboratory in Copenhagen. However, the first industrial method for extracting aluminum was developed by Friedrich Wöhler and Henri Étienne Sainte-Claire Deville independently in the 1850s.
When calcium oxide is reacted with chlorine, calcium chloride is formed along with oxygen gas. The balanced chemical equation for the reaction is: CaO + Cl2 → CaCl2 + O2.
The answer is 95,34 g.
Table salt is NaCl (Sodium Chloride), but a salt in chemistry is just the solid produced when a metal is reacted with an acid.
I'm betting that it varies depending on molarity and amount, but when I reacted 10mL of 1.0 Tin (II) chloride with 5.0 grams of Aluminum powder, there was a rather violent reaction that sent up a brief cloud of aluminum (and probably a bit of the chloride solution) and got the product all over the container it was in due to me recoiling and knocking over the beaker. It was a bit of a blur to be honest, but that's basically what happened to me. Also, AlCl3 was likely formed.
(NH4)2CO3+2HCl=H2O+CO2+2NH4Cl ammonium carbonate+hydrochloric acid=water+carbondioxide+Ammonium chloride It can also form ammonium chloride and hydocarbonic acid
Same question but I don’t know
Methane could be used used for preparation of toluene but not directly. First, methane is reacted with chlorine to give chloromethane and that chloromethane is reacted with AlCl3 to form CH3+ and AlCl4- . This is reacted with Benzene(C6H6). This yields toluene as CH3+ replaces a hydrogen from Benzene.
One such salt would be aluminum chloride since it is soluble but when reacted with ammonium hydroxide, the insoluble aluminum hydroxide forms a precipitate. Not sure what is meant by "is insoluble in excess", however.
Hydrogen Chloride gas --> HCl or Hydrochloric Acid --> HCl(aq)
Since both chloride anions and nitrate anions have a charge of -1, there will be the same number of moles of silver chloride produced as the moles of silver nitrate reacted. (Since both silver nitrate and silver chloride are ionic compounds, it would be preferable to call their "moles" "formula units" instead.)
Aluminum was discovered in 1825 by Hans Christian Ørsted, a Danish chemist, in a laboratory in Copenhagen. However, the first industrial method for extracting aluminum was developed by Friedrich Wöhler and Henri Étienne Sainte-Claire Deville independently in the 1850s.
When calcium oxide is reacted with chlorine, calcium chloride is formed along with oxygen gas. The balanced chemical equation for the reaction is: CaO + Cl2 → CaCl2 + O2.
Aluminum is a silvery metal that will evolve hydrogen gas when reacted with a strong acid. Aluminum will also evolve hydrogen gas as a product of its reaction with a strong acid.