The chloride ion is the conjugate base of a strong acid.
It depends on which chloride is being talked about. For example - hydrogen chloride(HCl) is an acid! However, potassium chloride(KCl) is a salt.
The acid required is Hydrochloric Acid and the base is Ammonium Hydroxide (Ammonia solution in water). If the acid and base are very concentrated and merely placed close to each other, the vapours from them will react immediately to form white clouds of ammonium chloride particles.
Nickel (II) chloride is neither a base nor an acid; it is a salt composed of a metal cation (nickel) and a chlorine anion. It is formed by the reaction of nickel oxide with hydrochloric acid.
Cl is the symbol for the chloride ion, which is the conjugate base of hydrochloric acid (HCl). Therefore, Cl is a base.
Hydrochloric acid mixes with calcium chloride to produce calcium chloride salt and water. This reaction is a simple acid-base reaction where the hydrogen ions from the acid combine with the chloride ions from the calcium chloride to form salt.
It depends on which chloride is being talked about. For example - hydrogen chloride(HCl) is an acid! However, potassium chloride(KCl) is a salt.
The solution of nickel chloride is acidic.
its a salt
The anion from an acid is Cl- and the cation from a base is Na+.
ammonium on it's own is a base and chlorine is not an acid. so i think ammonium chloride is a base.
Sodium chloride is neutral.
Calcium chloride solution is neutral.
Hydrochloric acid is an acid.
Nope, sodium chloride is not an acid. It is more of a base due to its pH of 6.7 to 7.3 causing it to be a neutral/base. Also, it is ingested by humans, so lets hope its not a base!
no its boobs 23
Neither, it is a neutral salt (conjugated with the strong acid HCl)
Strongly acidic