2NaOH + Cl2 → NaCl + NaOCl + H2O Sodium Hydroxide + Chlorine → Sodium Chloride (salt) + Sodium Hypochlorite + Water
Divide the amount of sodium chloride by the total amount (sodium chloride + water). Then multiply that by 100 to convert to percent.
first oxidise the benzaldehyde to carboxylic acid(benzoic acid) using any oxidising agent .then add SOCl2
What really combines is silver ion. Silver chloride is 1/10 soluble than silver chromate in the cold, 1/3 in hot water. That means silver will incline to precipitate as AgCl preferentially. Moreover, if chromate will form it will convert to silver chloride
Silver chloride is 1/10 soluble than silver chromate in the cold 1/3 in hot water. That means silver will incline to precepetate as AgCl preferentially. More over if chromate will form it will convert to silver nitrate.
Well, it depends. You don't want to directly mix the two, and you should never use cal-hypo in a chlorine feeder made for trichlor. Cal-hypo can have hazardous reactions with many organic compounds. If you're putting them into a swimming pool, there is no problem with using both, just give them an opportunity to fully dissolve/dillute in the water. Once in the water, they both convert to hypochlorous acid, which is the sanitizing version of chlorine. Technically, all forms of pool chlorine convert to hypochlorous acid, but some will have other affects on water chemistry. For instance, trichlor (Trichloroisocyanuric acid) and dichlor (Dichloroisocyanuric acid) both add cyanuric acid, which is stabilizer (CYA) to your pool. Excess stabilizer makes your chlorine less effective. Also, both are very acidic, and will lower your pools ph. Calcium hypochlorite adds calcium, which you need in a concrete/plaster/gunite pool, but it also accumulates over time and can get too high. Sodium hypochlorite doesn't really add anything to your water, other than more water, so it has the least side effects to your water chemistry. And technically, Lithium Hypochlorite has no real side effects either, so it would b good to use, but it is so gawd-awfully expensive that it's not used much in the real world.
The answer is UNICORNS ND BUBBLES
From 100 to 113 Deg C, barium chloride convert to anhydrous form.
Divide the amount of sodium chloride by the total amount (sodium chloride + water). Then multiply that by 100 to convert to percent.
chlorine atom will first convert to the gaseous chlorine atom which will then add one electron to form chloride ion.
Dissolve zinc in dilute hydrochlic acid (take precautions), and then let the liquid evaporate.
1butanol with methanesulfonyl chloride. Then react the product of that with sodium methane. the product of this second reaction with be your ch3ch2ch2ch20ch3
To synthesize acetophenone from benzene, you just need to add the aldehyde to the benzene ring. This can be done via a Friedel-Crafts acylation. The reagents are an acid chloride (acetyl chloride in this case) and AlCl3 (stoichiometric).
first oxidise the benzaldehyde to carboxylic acid(benzoic acid) using any oxidising agent .then add SOCl2
two or three days a week
To determine the mass of silver chloride produced, we need to know the balanced chemical equation for the reaction between silver nitrate (AgNO3) and sodium chloride (NaCl) that produces silver chloride (AgCl) as a precipitate. Once we have the balanced equation, we can use the stoichiometry of the reaction to determine the number of moles of AgCl produced, and then convert that to mass using the molar mass of AgCl.
The molar mass of sodium chloride is 58,44 g.75 hundreds (75 %) is 43,83 g.
The formula for this conversion is mEq = mg/atomic weight * valence. The atomic weight of sodium chloride is 23mg/mM.