Water is a polar molecule and hexane is non-polar. This means that water has positive charges that grab on to the negative-chlorine and water has negative charges that grab onto the positive-hydrogen. This pulls the hydrogen and chlorine apart as positive and negative ions. The these positive and negative ions can move around separately as positive and negative electrical carriers.
In hexane the hydrogen and chlorine are locked together, a single neutral molecule and no charged ions. Any positive movement of the hydrogen is locked to the negative movement of the chlorine, so any movement balances out to zero charge movement and zero electrical movement.
Assuming that the question is asking if hydrogen chloride is soluble in water, yes. Hydrogen chloride, when dissolved in water, becomes Hydrochloric acid.
when hydrogen chloride is dissolved in water to form hydrochloric acid, the hydrogen chloride turns to HCL subscript 38 because of the water molecules. i also believe that they change from clear to a misty green colour but it may just be the result of a dirty test tube.
Hydrogen chloride in aqueous solution is commonly known as hydrochloric acid.
What you need to remember that Hydrogen is H+ plus an electron e- Therefore it conducts electricity and a good heat conductor. Also creates water when bonded with Oxygen, very important in photosynthesis, cellular respiration and our everyday life ;)
Hydrogen chloride (HCl) exists as a gas before being dissolved in water. It is a colorless and highly corrosive gas with a strong acidic odor.
Aqueous hydrogen chloride is a solution of hydrogen chloride gas dissolved in water. It forms hydrochloric acid when dissolved in water. It is a strong acid.
To conduct electricity, the substance should contain free moving ions. In anhydrous hydrogen chloride, both hydrogen ions(positively charged) and chloride ions (negatively charged) are held by the electrostatic forces of attraction. Due to the non-availability of the free moving ions in anhydrous hydrogen chloride, it does not conduct electricity. But if it is dissolved in water, electrostatic forces of attraction can be removed, and free moving hydrogen and chloride ions are formed in the solution. This leads to conduct dc electricity.
Hydrochloric acid is hydrogen chloride dissolved in water.
Assuming that the question is asking if hydrogen chloride is soluble in water, yes. Hydrogen chloride, when dissolved in water, becomes Hydrochloric acid.
Yes, it is a electrolyte. Bez has a ability to relese the one electron.
Acids, bases, and salts are molecular substances that, when dissolved in water, can form ions and conduct electricity in solution. Examples include hydrochloric acid (HCl), sodium hydroxide (NaOH), and sodium chloride (NaCl), respectively.
No, hydrogen chloride gas is a covalent compound and does not conduct electricity because it does not dissociate into ions that can carry charge.
when hydrogen chloride is dissolved in water to form hydrochloric acid, the hydrogen chloride turns to HCL subscript 38 because of the water molecules. i also believe that they change from clear to a misty green colour but it may just be the result of a dirty test tube.
Hydrogen chloride is a colourless gas , with a strong acid smell.
Hydrogen chloride in aqueous solution is commonly known as hydrochloric acid.
Water. Hydrochloric acid is just hydrogen chloride gas dissolved in pure water.
Hydrogen chloride and hydrogen fluoride are two examples of compounds that are covalent when pure but ionize to give ions when dissolved in water. When dissolved in water, hydrogen chloride forms H+ and Cl- ions, and hydrogen fluoride forms H+ and F- ions.