Single-replacement
No chemical reaction, only a solution containing ions of potassium, sodium and chlorine.
Chlorine is a stronger oxidizer than elemental Bromine. So, when yellowish chlorine gas is bubbled through the Bromide solution, a red colour is formed which is Bromine. Chlorine oxidizes Bromide ions to elemental Bromine while itself is reduced to Chloride ions. So, the total reaction is: Cl2 + Br- ----> Br2 + Cl-
Chlorine displaces bromine as it is more reactive, and it creates sodium chloride aqueous and bromine aqueous.
Send chlorine gas through iron fillings and dissolve the resultant substance in water. The solution is ferric chloride.
Chlorine itslf is not mined. The materials used to produce chlorine (NaCl) is mined. Chlorine is produced by electrolytic reaction of a chloride solution (e.g. NaCl) in a process involving a diaphragm cell or a mercury cell. The mercury cell process has been largely discontinued because of its associated loss of mercury to the environment.
Displacement scratch that it a single replacement
No chemical reaction, only a solution containing ions of potassium, sodium and chlorine.
Chlorine is a stronger oxidizer than elemental Bromine. So, when yellowish chlorine gas is bubbled through the Bromide solution, a red colour is formed which is Bromine. Chlorine oxidizes Bromide ions to elemental Bromine while itself is reduced to Chloride ions. So, the total reaction is: Cl2 + Br- ----> Br2 + Cl-
The salt molecules are "torn apart" by the water, and are reduced to sodium (Na+) and chlorine (Cl-) ions. It is the ions that go into solution and "float around" there. Note that elemental sodium and elemental chlorine are not what is in solution. The ions are. Salt, sodium chloride, is an ionic molecule; an ionic bond holds salt together.
A strongly exothermic reaction to produce a salt, sodium chloride.
I think sodium,salt,chloride and that's it i think but double check though don't listen to the guy before me its sodium and chlorine. salt is what the compound reaction produces and chloride is the compound term for chlorine. I REPEAT THE ANSWER IS SODIUM AND CHLORINE
Chlorine displaces bromine as it is more reactive, and it creates sodium chloride aqueous and bromine aqueous.
Electrolysis of calcium chloride solution release chlorine.
1. The products of the molten sodium chloride electrolysis are sodium and chlorine. 2. The products of the water solution of sodium chloride electrolysis are sodium hydroxide and hydrogen.
This may be a trick question, electrolyis of a sodium chloride solution produces chlorine at the anode but does not produce sodium at the cathode. Electrolysis of molten sodium chloride does however produce sodium and chlorine.
When NaCl is placed in water, the sodium and chlorine dissociate, giving you ions of chlorine which are negatively charged, and sodium ions which are positively charged. There is no reaction when sodium chloride is placed in water.
A solution of copper chloride should be electrolyzed.