Iron chloride is only used in catalyst amounts because it is highly reactive and will release hydrogen which is highly flammable.
Boiling the water and ferric chloride mixture will not change the color of litmus paper, as litmus paper is not sensitive to the presence of ferric chloride. Litmus paper is typically used to test for acidity or basicity in a solution.
I would say sodium chloride as it is also known as salt-water, calcium is found in chalky cliffs "white cliffs of dover", so near there may be a high amount but sodium chloride would be in greater amounts in the majority of sea water
Iron is a tradition metal with two oxidation states, so two ionic compounds could exist. ( do not know if they really do ) FeCl2 = ferrous chloride, or called in the modern sense, Iron(II)chloride and FeCl3 = ferric chloride, or in the modern sense, Iron(III)chloride
Iron (II) chloride has the molecular formula of FeCl2. Iron (III) chloride is FeCl3. The difference between the two are the oxidation states of iron (Fe) between +2 and +3 respectively. Chlorine (Cl) has an anion charge of -1.
Ag+ is Silver, and Cl- is chlorine.When silver and chlorine are combined, the amounts do not need to be changed since the charges become neutral, so all that is changed is the -ine to an -ide.The final result is Silver Chloride. AgCl - Silver chloride
considering it only contains iron (Fe) and chlorine (Cl), none.
Boiling the water and ferric chloride mixture will not change the color of litmus paper, as litmus paper is not sensitive to the presence of ferric chloride. Litmus paper is typically used to test for acidity or basicity in a solution.
I would say sodium chloride as it is also known as salt-water, calcium is found in chalky cliffs "white cliffs of dover", so near there may be a high amount but sodium chloride would be in greater amounts in the majority of sea water
Iron is a tradition metal with two oxidation states, so two ionic compounds could exist. ( do not know if they really do ) FeCl2 = ferrous chloride, or called in the modern sense, Iron(II)chloride and FeCl3 = ferric chloride, or in the modern sense, Iron(III)chloride
No. Ferrous and ferric cations are divalent and trivalent respectively, but both are only single atom ions.
Only if you mix it into the paint as a liquid.
Yes, but in the form of sodium chloride. Sodium chloride is table salt, and is contained in many foods. Only very small amounts are needed in the human diet, on a daily basis. In civilized societies, with their processed foods, most people eat too much salt.
Legally you can only replace a catalytic converter with another catalytic converter.
Iron (II) chloride has the molecular formula of FeCl2. Iron (III) chloride is FeCl3. The difference between the two are the oxidation states of iron (Fe) between +2 and +3 respectively. Chlorine (Cl) has an anion charge of -1.
There is only one catalytic converter on the 99 TL.
Catalytic converters are very expensive. For this reason only replace the catalytic converter if it is defective. If only one of the two are defective replace that one.
There is only one catalytic converter in the exhaust system.