The coloured material may lose its colour, because many dyes and pigments are bleached by an aqueous chlorine solution.
The coloured material may lose its colour, because many dyes and pigments are bleached by an aqueous chlorine solution.
Chlorine displaces bromine as it is more reactive, and it creates sodium chloride aqueous and bromine aqueous.
In aqueous solution, H2 is evolved at the cathode (instead of sodium) and chlorine gas is collected at the anode.
Single-replacement
Chlorine displaces Potassium Iodide to liberate aqueous I2(brown colour). Hence the solution turns brown.
Electrolyse the molten salt. This will form sodium at the cathode and Cl2 at the anode. Electrolysis of an aqueous solution odf salt will produce hydrogen at the cathode and chlorine gas at the anode.
It's an aqueous solution.
It's an aqueous solution.
Chlorine displaces bromine as it is more reactive, and it creates sodium chloride aqueous and bromine aqueous.
Colourless solution. most coloured solutions contain transition metal ions
In aqueous solution, H2 is evolved at the cathode (instead of sodium) and chlorine gas is collected at the anode.
HCl can be split into hydrogen and chlorine by subjecting it to electrolysis. If it is in an aqueous solution, you will get the chlorine mixed with oxygen.
Single-replacement
Yes, an aqueous solution is a system having a uniform composition and appearance. If the solution is saturated, only the solution above the solid material will be uniform.
This solution is called water solution or aqueous solution.
Displacement scratch that it a single replacement
Chlorine displaces Potassium Iodide to liberate aqueous I2(brown colour). Hence the solution turns brown.
Though they dissociate into ions in an aqueou solution, a bond between hydrogen and chlorine is covalent.