Ci is actually not an element. Elements begin with a capital letter and the following letters are lowercase; you probably meant Cl. CaCl2 is calcium chloride, which is made up up one calcium atoms connected to two chlorine atoms in an ionic bond. This is a compound, not an element, because there is more then one element.
It is Calcium Chloride.
However, this is a compound, not an element.
There are calcium, sulfur and oxygen atoms in Calcium Sulfate.
It is obvious from formula the elements are Calcium , Sulphur and Oxygen.
Ca, S, and O (3) make up CaSO4.
It is a SALT.
ionic bond calcium donates 2 electrons to two chlorine atoms and both attain stable configuration
I think you mean CaCl2 which is calcium chloride
An equation that is an example of a double displacement reaction is CaCI2 + 2 NaHC03 2 NaCI + CaCO3 + H2O + C02. This equation is what you get when sodium bicarbonate mixes with calcium chloride.
Element
Calcium chloride contain calcium and chlorine.
its for school
a chocolate biscuit
you would need to know which of those are reactants and which were products, and there is no Ci element, and i am nowhere good enough to take those (if they are reactants) and come up with a product.
It is a SALT.
CACI2 atom name is CALCIUM CHLORIDE
Limewater Test (HCI + CaCI2 + H2O + CO2)
The answer is 2,09 moles.
No compound exists with this formula. However, CaCl2 (with a lowercase L) is calcium chloride, which is an ionic compound.
ionic bond calcium donates 2 electrons to two chlorine atoms and both attain stable configuration
this can be trick balancing equations but this one is easy. the correct equation is CaCO3--> CaO+CO2. CaO plus CO2 does equal CaCO3 because you are adding the single Oxogen atom in CaO to the double Oxygen atom in CO2. basic maths makes it 1+2=3. Easy!!
First it's CaCl2, with a lowercase L, not an i. The balanced equation is: Na2CO3(aq) + CaCl2(aq) --> 2NaCl(aq) + CaCO3(s)