Potassium Chloride- used to prevent or to treat low blood levels of potassium (hypokalemia). Potassium levels can be low as a result of a disease or from taking certain medicines, or after a prolonged illness with diarrhea or vomiting.
Potassium + Chlorine --> Potassium Chloride (potassium plus chlorine arrow potassium chloride)
NaCl, kitchen salt. *************2nd Opinion ************** I'm sure the first answer writer meant to say potassium chloride, which, incidentally, is used as a table salt substitute.
There is 3 measurements of chlorine in a pool or spa. Total chlorine, combined chlorine, and free available chlorine. Free available chlorine is the good chlorine that is active in the pool killings germs and algae. Combined chlorine is chlorine is basically chlorine that was once active but has killed germs or bacteria and is now inactive in the pool. Total chlorine is free available and combined chlorine added together. If your combined chlorine is higher than free available chlorine then the water needs to be shocked to eliminate the combined chlorine. But be careful here. If you don't reach what's called break point you will only add to the combined chlorine. There are products on the market which will only remove combined chlorine without effecting your free available chlorine if you are unsure about reaching breakpoint. Hope this helps.
Chloride: Cl-Potassium bromide: KBr
Yes, to form Potassium Fluoride + Chlorine because the chlorine isn't reactive enough to overpower fluoride and steal potassium off of him.. Cl2 + KF ---> KF + Cl2
Hydrogen, sodium, & potassium.
potassium chlorine
You get a non-hazardous salt: potassium chloride.
potassium chloride
Potassium + Chlorine --> Potassium Chloride (potassium plus chlorine arrow potassium chloride)
it was from a biochemical disaster when hydrogen, potassium, and chlorine is combined and you inject it in to a slug!
Potassium and chlorine, because the chemical formula is KCl.
Potassium (K) and Chlorine (CL)
chlorine and potassium
Sodium to make salt.
NaCl, kitchen salt. *************2nd Opinion ************** I'm sure the first answer writer meant to say potassium chloride, which, incidentally, is used as a table salt substitute.
There are two elements in potassium chloride. One atom of potassium and one atom of chlorine react to form potassium chloride.