It is not possible.
This is a single replacement reaction where chlorine (Cl2) displaces bromine in sodium bromide (NaBr) to form sodium chloride (NaCl) and bromine gas (Br2).
I think this is right... Cl2 + 2NaBr = 2NaCl + Br2
The answer is TWO (2)Na2CO3 + CaCl2 --> 2 NaCl + CaCO3
The reaction between sodium bromide (NaBr) and silver nitrate (AgNO3) results in the formation of silver bromide (AgBr) and sodium nitrate (NaNO3). The balanced chemical equation for this reaction is: 2NaBr + AgNO3 → 2AgBr + 2NaNO3
The word equation for silver nitrate plus sodium chloride is "silver nitrate + sodium chloride → silver chloride + sodium nitrate". The symbol equation for this reaction is "AgNO3 + NaCl → AgCl + NaNO3".
This is a single replacement reaction where chlorine (Cl2) displaces bromine in sodium bromide (NaBr) to form sodium chloride (NaCl) and bromine gas (Br2).
single replacement
Yes, this reaction is possible. Fluorine will displace chlorine from some compounds.
Any reaction occur.
Any reaction occur.
HBr + NaOH ------> NaBr + H2O This is an acid-base reaction. The compounds will disassociate into ions in solution. The hydrogen from the HBr will go to the OH- and form water. The NaBr is a salt.
The balanced equation is: 2AgNO3 + 2NaBr → 2NaNO3 + 2AgBr.
When you flame test the two solutions, any Na solution burns yellow, while any K solution burns violet/purple. So both the KCl and the KBr will burn purple, while both NaBr and NaCl will burn yellow.
The balanced chemical equation for the decomposition of NaClO3 to O2 and NaCl is: 2 NaClO3 -> 3 O2 + 2 NaCl
It is possible.
When NaHCO3 is combined with CaCl2 and H2O, a reaction will occur. However, the specific products depend on the conditions of the reaction - typically, NaHCO3 will react with CaCl2 to form NaCl, CaCO3, and H2O.
2NH4Cl + Na2CO3 --> 2NH3 + CO2 + H2O + 2NaCl