Potassium chloride itself is not flammable. However, when mixed with sulfur, the mixture can become flammable as sulfur can act as a fuel source. This mixture can be explosive when exposed to high heat or flame.
No - there would be a reaction though if Chlorine and Potassium Iodide were mixed
Potassium chloride is a chemical compound commonly used as a salt substitute in food. When potassium chloride is mixed with water, it dissolves and forms a solution in which the potassium and chloride ions are separated and dispersed evenly throughout the water.
I have no idea. The products of that reaction are water (not a gas at room temperature) and potassium chloride (not a gas at room temperature).
When chlorine is mixed with potassium bromide solution, chlorine will displace bromine to form potassium chloride. Similarly, when chlorine is mixed with potassium iodide solution, chlorine will displace iodine to form potassium chloride. These reactions are examples of displacement reactions where a more reactive element displaces a less reactive element from its compound.
The insoluble white substance formed when potassium chloride is mixed with silver nitrate is silver chloride. This reaction is a precipitation reaction where silver chloride forms a white solid precipitate due to the insolubility of silver chloride in water.
No - there would be a reaction though if Chlorine and Potassium Iodide were mixed
No
Potassium chloride is a chemical compound commonly used as a salt substitute in food. When potassium chloride is mixed with water, it dissolves and forms a solution in which the potassium and chloride ions are separated and dispersed evenly throughout the water.
I have no idea. The products of that reaction are water (not a gas at room temperature) and potassium chloride (not a gas at room temperature).
Any reaction occur.
You can make potassium chloride precipitate by adding silver nitrate (AgNO3). The chemical equation being AgNO3(aq)+ KCl(aq) = KNO3(aq) + AgCl(s) You know that silver nitrate will form a precipitate as you can see this on a solubility chart.
When chlorine is mixed with potassium bromide solution, chlorine will displace bromine to form potassium chloride. Similarly, when chlorine is mixed with potassium iodide solution, chlorine will displace iodine to form potassium chloride. These reactions are examples of displacement reactions where a more reactive element displaces a less reactive element from its compound.
Yes, when potassium chloride is mixed with water, it forms a homogeneous solution. The potassium chloride molecules become evenly distributed throughout the water, resulting in a clear and uniform liquid.
The insoluble white substance formed when potassium chloride is mixed with silver nitrate is silver chloride. This reaction is a precipitation reaction where silver chloride forms a white solid precipitate due to the insolubility of silver chloride in water.
The final solution color will depend on the concentration of barium chloride and potassium chloride. However, in general, barium chloride is white and potassium chloride is colorless, so the final solution will likely appear white or colorless.
When potassium hydroxide and hydrochloric acid are mixed, the salt potassium chloride is formed. This chemical reaction also produces water.
Yes - you have an acid and base and the resultant products are a salt (Potassium Chloride) and water