it is a salt! neither an acid nor base.
both
Chlorine is soluable, potassium however I think not. KClO3 is an ionic compound though.
KClO3 --> KCl + 3O2 is a decomposision or breakdown reaction or reversed oxidation
2 KClO3 ------ 2KCl + 3O2 so 2 moles of KClO3 produces two mole of KCl. Therefore 0.440 moles of potassium chlorate will produce 0.44 moles of KCl - potassium chloride.
2 grams of Oxygen can be obtained from 5 grams of KClO3 (only if the "CL" means "Cl", which is Chlorine! Remember that only the first letter of the atomic symbol is capitalized.)
both
HCN is an acid; KClO3 is a salt.
The formula for potassium chlorate is KClO3.
KClO3+3H2SO3=KCl+3H2SO4
The name of the compound with the formula KClO3 is "potassium chlorate".
KClO3
Chlorine is soluable, potassium however I think not. KClO3 is an ionic compound though.
No: KClO3 is the formula for potassium chlorate, but the formula for potassium chloride is simply KCl.
KClO3
Potassium chlorate
KClO3
KClO3 --> KCl + 3O2 is a decomposision or breakdown reaction or reversed oxidation