Nothing happens. It is still NaCl and KOH.
Potassium hydroxide is KOH. Sodium chloride is NaCl. A reaction doesn't exist.
NaCl, NaOH, NaBr, KBr, KOH
When sodium and chloride combine, they form sodium chloride, which has the chemical formula NaCl.
NaCl (table salt)
Na:Sodium Cl:Chlorine NaCl= Salt
The formula for the ionic compound formed from potassium hydroxide is KOH. This is because potassium (K) has a +1 charge and hydroxide (OH) has a -1 charge, so they combine in a 1:1 ratio to form a neutral compound.
KOH consists of: Pottasium+1 (K) Oxygen-2 (O) Hydrogen+1 (H)
Na2+ + Cl2- = NaCl so NaCl is the answer.
Any reaction between NaCl and H.
Sodium is Na and Chloride is Cl and their charges balance out so it makes NaCl.
They actually do combine during electrolysis of aqueous Sodium Chloride
Nothing. NaCl creates a reverse reaction to H2O.