It is not possible.
reaction of NaBr+Cl2
Na+ and C2H3O2- (acetate) don't react. Only Ag+ and Cl- do so by precipitation: Ag+ + Cl- --> (AgCl)s
NO
the equation is, NaBr + AgNO3 = AgBr(pale yellow ppts) + NaNO3(aq.)
The answer is TWO (2)Na2CO3 + CaCl2 --> 2 NaCl + CaCO3
reaction of NaBr+Cl2
single replacement
Yes, this reaction is possible. Fluorine will displace chlorine from some compounds.
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.
cacl2 plus na2s equals cas plus
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.
NaCl plus CaCO3 plus water
AgNO3+NaBr--->NaNO3+AgBr
Any reaction occur.
Any reaction occur.
Yes it is
2NaClO3 -> 2NaCl + 3O2