yes it yeilds oxygen and sodium chloride when the heatis applied to the sodium chlorate the heat decomposes the chemical into 2 substances sodium chloride in solid form and oxygen in gas form.
NaClO3 + heat ----> NaCl + O3
yes
The chemical equation is:2 NaClO3 = 2 NaCl + 3 O2
Cesium chloride is ionic as are all cesium compounds.
Sodium chlorate is an ionic substance, as it consists of a metal (sodium) and non-metallic elements.
It contains the sodium ion Na+ and the chlorate ion ClO3- Since sodium is the positive ion (cation) you name it first, then you name the chlorate ion second because it is the anion (negative ion). so the name of the compound is sodium chlorate.
sodium chloride and oxygen gas.
yes
sodium chloride and oxygen gas.
sodium chloride and oxygen gas.
The chemical equation is:2 NaClO3 = 2 NaCl + 3 O2
Not directly; sodium chlorate/sodium chlorite are used, derived from sodium chloride.
sodium, chlorine and oxygen
Cesium chloride is ionic as are all cesium compounds.
Sodium Chlorate's formula is NaClO3. Therefore, the elements found in Sodium Chlorate would be Sodium (Na), Chlorine (Cl), and Oxygen (O).
Nope, I think you are referring to chlorate, the polyatomic ion (ClO3). The -ide at the end of chloride is the suffix you use when naming an ionic compund. For example: ----> Chlorine (1-) + Sodium (1+) = Sodium Chloride (NaCl) and not Sodium Chlorine.
Sodium Chlorate
approx 94 to 95 % in a commercial electrolyser