Hydrogen chloride can emit protons to the medium. It is not a salt but a strong acid.
When sodium chloride reacts with hydrochloric acid, it forms sodium chloride solution. The hydrogen ions from the hydrochloric acid combine with the chloride ions from the sodium chloride, creating hydrochloric acid. Sodium ions remain in solution.
hydrochloric acid + sodium hydroxide --> sodium chloride + waterHCl + NaOH --> NaCl + H2ONeutralisationAcids and alkalis react with each other. The alkali cancels out the acid in the reaction. This is called neutralisation. A salt is made. The salt contains the metal atom from the alkali, and part of the acid molecule. The salt made depends on the acid and alkali used.
When sodium reacts with hydrochloric acid, it produces sodium chloride (table salt) and hydrogen gas. The reaction can be quite vigorous, with the release of heat and bubbling due to the formation of hydrogen gas.
When zinc reacts with hydrochloric acid it produces zinc chloride and hydrogen gas.
Hydrogen chloride gas is colorless.
Common table salt is Sodium Chloride ( NaCl ) and has no hydrogen atoms.
Sodium chloride is the sodium salt of hydrogen chloride.
Sodium chloride is the product of reaction between sodium hydroxide and hydrogen chloride.
Sodium Chloride (salt), Carbon Dioxide, and Water
"Common salt", with the chemical formula NaCl, does not contain any hydrogen. The much larger chemical class of "salts" includes some examples that do contain hydrogen, for example the ammonium salts.
Chloride
Hydrochloric acid mixes with calcium chloride to produce calcium chloride salt and water. This reaction is a simple acid-base reaction where the hydrogen ions from the acid combine with the chloride ions from the calcium chloride to form salt.
First, sodium chloride is salt, and salt is nothing like water which is di-hydrogen oxide. Salt is a solid and crystalline at room temperature where water is liquid.
When sodium is mixed with hydrogen chloride, a chemical reaction occurs where the sodium displaces hydrogen to form sodium chloride (table salt) and hydrogen gas. The reaction is highly exothermic and can be dangerous if not conducted properly, as it produces heat and releases flammable hydrogen gas.
The salt formed from the reaction between hydrochloric acid (HCl) and a base is called a chloride salt. For example, when hydrochloric acid reacts with sodium hydroxide (NaOH), the resulting salt is sodium chloride (NaCl), commonly known as table salt. Chloride salts are formed when the hydrogen ion (H+) from the acid combines with the hydroxide ion (OH-) from the base.
When sodium chloride reacts with hydrochloric acid, it forms sodium chloride solution. The hydrogen ions from the hydrochloric acid combine with the chloride ions from the sodium chloride, creating hydrochloric acid. Sodium ions remain in solution.
The word equation for the preparation of hydrogen gas is: metal + acid → salt + hydrogen gas. For example, when hydrochloric acid reacts with zinc, it produces zinc chloride salt and hydrogen gas.