Calcium chloride (CaCl2) is an ionic halide.
CaO is calcium Oxide . It is white solid. It is ionically bonded. It is a BASE. It will dissolve in water to form, the alkali, calcium hydroxide. Its bonding may be presented by :0 CaO(s) = Ca^2+ + O^2- . Note the ionic charged balance.
Single replacement.
Iron is not a mixture; it is a type of metal, and the most abundant type on Earth. It can also be found in human bodies, fruits, and vegetables.
exothermic
Precipitate because you're making a solid out of two liquids.
No compound exists with this formula. However, CaCl2 (with a lowercase L) is calcium chloride, which is an ionic compound.
HCL is covalent. This is the type of bond that forms with the combination of Hydrogen and Chloride
which type of crystalline solid is CaCl2
Yes!
CaO is calcium Oxide . It is white solid. It is ionically bonded. It is a BASE. It will dissolve in water to form, the alkali, calcium hydroxide. Its bonding may be presented by :0 CaO(s) = Ca^2+ + O^2- . Note the ionic charged balance.
Calcium chloride is consists of ionic bonds.
This question is far too broad...what type of compound are you looking for? And what do you consider "low"? Room temperature? 1,000 degrees Celsius? More detail please....
Single replacement.
Calcium chloride has an ionic bond.
Iron is not a mixture; it is a type of metal, and the most abundant type on Earth. It can also be found in human bodies, fruits, and vegetables.
exothermic
There is no equation for reacting CaCl2 and H2O. This is because nothing happens when these two chemicals combine because there is no reaction. If one was to add CaCl2 to H2O, he would end up with wet calcium chloride.