The chemical formula (more correct is formula unit) of sodium chloride is NaCl.
There is no equation because there is no reaction.
The correct balanced chemical equation is B: 2AgNO3 + 2NaCl → 2AgCl + 2NaNO3. This equation shows the correct stoichiometry of reactants and products, ensuring that mass is conserved.
Balanced Chemical equation
The equation is: NaCl----------Na++ Cl-
If the gases have the same molar volume, the stoichiometric ratio would be one to one. Molar volume is the volume occupied by one mole of a substance. This indicates that there is a 1:1 molar ratio of each gas.
NaCl doesn't burn.
You can determine if a reaction is stoichiometric by comparing the balanced chemical equation to the actual amounts of reactants and products in the reaction. If the amounts of reactants and products are in the exact ratios as predicted by the balanced equation, then the reaction is stoichiometric.
A skeleton equation shows the correct formulas of the reactants and products but does not have balanced coefficients. It provides a basic outline of the chemical reaction without specifying the exact amounts of each substance involved. Balancing the equation ensures that the number of atoms of each element is the same on both sides of the reaction.
The correct mole ratio is expressed using coefficients from a balanced chemical equation. These coefficients represent the relative number of moles of each substance involved in the reaction. The mole ratio is determined by these coefficients and is used to convert between different substances in stoichiometric calculations.
NaCl is sodium chloride or salt.
2NaCI is the chemical formula(there is no equation). The compound is called D-Glucosamine Sulfate.
A balanced chemical equation ensures that the reactants and products are in the correct stoichiometric ratios. This allows you to use the coefficients in the balanced equation as conversion factors to determine the amounts of reactants consumed or products produced in a chemical reaction. This is essential in solving stoichiometry problems accurately.