Cl is chloride on the Periodic Table and is gas state it is considered a acidic gas an is very reactive. Cl can be found in my different compounds the most common is NaCl or common table salt.
Cl is the symbol for the chloride ion, which is the conjugate base of hydrochloric acid (HCl). Therefore, Cl is a base.
HCL is the conjugate acid pair of Cl. And Cl is the conjugate base pair of HCl.
For the nitric acid (HNO3) the conjugate base is the ion (NO3)-.
Cl- is the negative chlorine ion is its neither acidic or alkaline. H+(aq)Cl-(aq) is Hydrochloric acid a common labrtory acid
((CH3)3NH)Cl is a salt formed by the reaction of the base trimethylamine ((CH3)3NH) and hydrochloric acid (HCl). Trimethylamine is a weak base, so ((CH3)3NH)Cl would be considered acidic.
Cl is the symbol for the chloride ion, which is the conjugate base of hydrochloric acid (HCl). Therefore, Cl is a base.
HCL is the conjugate acid pair of Cl. And Cl is the conjugate base pair of HCl.
For the nitric acid (HNO3) the conjugate base is the ion (NO3)-.
Cl- is the negative chlorine ion is its neither acidic or alkaline. H+(aq)Cl-(aq) is Hydrochloric acid a common labrtory acid
The anion from an acid is Cl- and the cation from a base is Na+.
F is the stronger base because it is bigger than Cl
Cl can act as both a Lewis acid and a Lewis base depending on the reaction it is involved in. As a Lewis acid, Cl can accept an electron pair and form a coordinate covalent bond. As a Lewis base, Cl can donate an electron pair to form a bond.
((CH3)3NH)Cl is a salt formed by the reaction of the base trimethylamine ((CH3)3NH) and hydrochloric acid (HCl). Trimethylamine is a weak base, so ((CH3)3NH)Cl would be considered acidic.
Hydrochloric acid
Acetic acid / acetate water / hydroxide ammonium / ammonia
CaCl2 -----> Ca2+ Cl-it is a salt
Cl- in aqueous solution is neutral, but according to Lewis theory it is base because it is electron donor. you can learn more on wikipedia: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lewis_acids_and_bases