HClO is a weak acid so it will only partly dissociate into H+,Cl-, and most will stay as HClO.
NH4Cl is the solute.
water is the solvent
Ammonium cations (NH4+) and chloride anions (Cl-) re present in aqueous solution of ammonium chloride.
No reaction occurs
Ammonium chloride is soluble in water. Silver chloride is not soluble in water and will form a white precipitate in an aqueous solution.
NH4NO3(aq) + KCL(aq) --> KNO3(s) + NH4CL(aq) This is a type of metathesis reaction called a double displacement reaction. Aqueous ammonium nitrate and aqueous potassium chloride yields solid potassium nitrate and aqueous ammonium chloride. Essentially the cations and anions of the reactants switch, and potassium nitrate (one of the products) precipitates out of the solution as a solid. The ammonium chloride (the other product formed) remains dissociated as ions in the solution. The above reaction is balanced.
No they are not same. Ammonium hydroxide is a weak base, an aqueous compound in normal state. Ammonium chloride is a an acidic salt and is a white powder in normal state.
since ammonium chloride is a subline solid, it gets converted into gaseous state directly without changing into liquid state
No reaction occurs
nothing happens. it becomes an aqueous solution of ammonium chloride
Ammonium chloride dissociates 100% into ions in solution. The ammonium ions interact with the hydroxide ions from the water removing them from the solution. This increases the concentration of hydrogen ions, increasing the acidity of the solution. We say that a solution of ammonium chloride is acidic by hydrolysis.
The spectator ions are chloride and ammonium; the copper and phosphate ions precipitate from the solution as copper (II) phosphate.
Ammonium chloride is soluble in water. Silver chloride is not soluble in water and will form a white precipitate in an aqueous solution.
Yes. An aqueous solution of ammonium carbonate would consist of dissociated ammonium ions and carbonate ions.
NH4NO3(aq) + KCL(aq) --> KNO3(s) + NH4CL(aq) This is a type of metathesis reaction called a double displacement reaction. Aqueous ammonium nitrate and aqueous potassium chloride yields solid potassium nitrate and aqueous ammonium chloride. Essentially the cations and anions of the reactants switch, and potassium nitrate (one of the products) precipitates out of the solution as a solid. The ammonium chloride (the other product formed) remains dissociated as ions in the solution. The above reaction is balanced.
No they are not same. Ammonium hydroxide is a weak base, an aqueous compound in normal state. Ammonium chloride is a an acidic salt and is a white powder in normal state.
since ammonium chloride is a subline solid, it gets converted into gaseous state directly without changing into liquid state
If you're asking about whether or not there would be a reaction, then probably not. You have two compounds with the same anion, so you will just have a big aqueous solution of chloride ions, plus some hydrogen and ammonium ions.
Yes, it is correct.
Sodium chloride may form aqueous solutions.