2NaCl(aq) + Ca(NO3)2(aq) -> 2NaNO3(aq) + CaCl2(aq)
s + p =
Both ammonium nitrate and calcium chloride are salts, as they are ionic compounds that can be produced from an acid-base reaction. Neither is the salt we put on our food, however. Table salt is sodium chloride.
The balanced equation is: Ca(NO3)2 + 2NaOH → Ca(OH)2 + 2NaNO3
The calcium ion is Ca2+ and the nitrate ion is NO3- and together they form Ca(NO3)2
lead II acetate and barium chloride equation
s + p =
how to mack copper sulphate,magnesium sulphate,potasasium cloride,potassium nitrate,iron chloride,calcium chloride,calcium suphate,calcium nitrate,copper nitrate,sodium nitrate,magnesium chloride,aluminum nitrate,siler nitrate. in a formula
Cu(NO3)2 an NaCl don't react, so there is not a balanced equation.
It is impossible to balance that equation.
Sodium chloride and and sodium nitrate doesn't react.
2AgNO3 + CaCl2 ->2AgCl + Ca(NO3)2
Sodium hydroxide Sodium chloride Calcium nitrate Calcium chloride
2Ag(NO3)2+CaCl2 ---> 2AgCl +Ca(NO3)2
Dissolve them in water and add some sodium chloride. The silver salt will form a precipitate (as silver chloride), the calcium salt will not.
The equation is CaCl2 (aq) + 2 AgNO3 (aq) -> 2 AgCl (s) + Ca(NO3)2 (aq).
The equation of calcium nitrate and water can be written as Ca(NO2)2 + H2O --->Ca(NO3)2.4H2O. Calcium nitrate is soluble in water deliquescence.
Examples: sodium chloride, potassium chloride, sodium nitrate, calcium carbonate, calcium phosphate etc.