F2 + 2CaCl --> 2FCl + 2Ca
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The word equation for the reaction between calcium and fluorine is: calcium + fluorine → calcium fluoride.
Calcium chloride reacts with sodium carbonate to from sodium chloride and calcium carbonate. This is a double displacement reaction. Skeleton equation: CaCl2 + Na2CO3 -> NaCl + CaCO3 Balanced equation: CaCl2 + Na2CO3 -> 2NaCl + CaCO3
The balanced equation for the reaction between calcium chloride (CaCl2) and sodium oxalate (Na2C2O4) is: CaCl2 + Na2C2O4 → CaC2O4 + 2NaCl
The balanced equation for the reaction between calcium (Ca) and chlorine (Cl2) to form calcium chloride (CaCl2) is: 2Ca + Cl2 -> 2CaCl2
Na2SO4 +CaCl2---------------> 2NaCL +CaSo4
The balanced equation for calcium chloride is CaCl2. This means that for every calcium atom, there are two chlorine atoms.
Calcium Flouride Ca+3F=CaF3 (balanced equation)
The balanced equation for the reaction between calcium metal and aluminum chloride is: 3Ca + 2AlCl3 → 3CaCl2 + 2Al
The chemical equation is:K2CO3 + CaCl2 = CaCO3(s) + 2 KCl
The balanced chemical equation for the formation of calcium fluoride from calcium and fluorine is: [ \text{Ca} + \text{F}_2 \rightarrow \text{CaF}_2 ] The coefficients in this equation are 1 for calcium (Ca), 1 for fluorine (F₂), and 1 for calcium fluoride (CaF₂). This indicates that one atom of calcium reacts with one molecule of fluorine to produce one formula unit of calcium fluoride.
The balanced chemical equation for the reaction between calcium chloride (CaCl2) and sodium stearate (C17H35COONa) would be: 2 CaCl2 + 2 C17H35COONa -> 2 NaCl + Ca(C17H35COO)2 This equation shows that calcium chloride reacts with sodium stearate to produce sodium chloride (NaCl) and calcium stearate.
The word equation for the reaction between calcium and fluorine is: calcium + fluorine → calcium fluoride.
You have answered the question for yourself. Calcium + Chlorine = Calcium chloride. The BALANCED reaction equation is Ca(s) + Cl2(g) = CaCl2(s)
This equation is CaO + 2 HCl -> CaCl2 + H2O.
The balanced equation for the reaction between barium sulfate (BaSO4) and calcium chloride (CaCl2) is BaSO4 + CaCl2 -> BaCl2 + CaSO4. This reaction forms barium chloride (BaCl2) and calcium sulfate (CaSO4) as products.
0.720940834 grams
The balanced chemical equation for this reaction is: Ca(s) + Cl2(g) -> CaCl2(s). This equation shows that one mole of solid calcium reacts with one mole of chlorine gas to produce one mole of solid calcium chloride.