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generally negatively charged chloride ion. but there are a few species where chlorine has positive charge like ClO3-, ClO4- etc.
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You use K molecules and Cl molecules to make a solid Potassium Chloride. Its like saying you use a house to build a house.
It is like 0.0024g of KCl per 100g of acetonitrile at 25oC. Link: http://potassiumchloride.in/
It's K+; + like any element of the first colonne of the periodic classification.
Just like sodium chloride.
When It combines with an electropositive element like Sodium,Potassium or,calciumm
An Ionic bond. When a metal (Potassium) and a non-metal (Chlorine) bond, they form an Ionic bond where the metal essentially donates some if it's valence electrons to complete the valence electron shell of the non-metal.
It is soluble, like Sodium Chloride or common salt
generally negatively charged chloride ion. but there are a few species where chlorine has positive charge like ClO3-, ClO4- etc.
k-cl:::
Chlorine (Cl2) is not an ionic compound. It is a covalently bonded element. Chlorine can form ionic compounds like NaCl (Sodium Chloride) or CaCl2 (Calcium Chloride) but is not itself an ionic compound.
Yes if you are using a chlorinator. salt is sodium chloride and the chlorinator converts it to sodium hypo-chloride which is chlorine.
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A compound name ending in chloride means that there is one or more lone atoms of chlorine in the compound. The chlorine is not bound up in a poly-atomic ion like chlorite or chlorate. An example is sodium chloride, NaCl, which contains one lone atom of chlorine. Another example is magnesium chloride, MgCl2, which contains two lone atoms of chlorine.
White powder like table salt
The chem panel or smac checks for eletrolytes like sodium, potassium, and chloride.