The equation for the reaction between lead oxide (PbO) and sodium chloride (NaCl) is not a direct chemical reaction since they do not typically react with each other. However, if you are looking for the formation of lead(II) chloride (PbCl₂) from lead oxide and hydrochloric acid (HCl), the relevant reaction would be:
[ \text{PbO} + 2\text{HCl} \rightarrow \text{PbCl}_2 + \text{H}_2\text{O} ]
In the presence of sodium chloride, the lead(II) chloride could potentially precipitate out in a solution containing NaCl, but there is no direct reaction between PbO and NaCl.
The balanced equation for the reaction between sodium chloride and lead nitrate to produce lead chloride is: 2NaCl + Pb(NO3)2 -> 2NaNO3 + PbCl2
Lithium chloride, barium oxide, sodium nitride, lead (II) sulphate
When solutions of sodium chloride and lead chloride are mixed, a precipitation reaction occurs. Lead chloride is less soluble than sodium chloride, so lead chloride precipitates out of the solution as a solid, while sodium chloride remains dissolved. This results in the formation of a white precipitate of lead chloride.
Because lead(II) sulfate is insoluble any reaction occur.
A white precipitate, lead (II) chloride, and aqueous sodium nitrate would form. The chemical equation is Pb(NO3)2(aq) + 2NaCl(aq) --> 2NaNO3(aq) + PbCl2(s). This type of reaction is called a double replacement or double displacement.
Sodium chloride (NaCl) Potassium iodide (KI) Calcium carbonate (CaCO3) Magnesium sulfate (MgSO4) Aluminum oxide (Al2O3) Iron(III) chloride (FeCl3) Copper(II) sulfate (CuSO4) Zinc bromide (ZnBr2) Barium nitrate (Ba(NO3)2) Silver sulfide (Ag2S)
LiCl is lithium chloride. BaO is barium oxide. Na3N is sodium nitride. PbSO4 is lead II sulfate.
2Na3(PO4) + 3Pb(II)Cl2 --> 6NaCl + Pb3(PO4)2
Heating lead nitrate crystals will decompose them into lead oxide, nitric oxide gas, and oxygen gas. When silver nitrate solution and sodium chloride solution are mixed, a white precipitate of silver chloride forms as a result of a double replacement reaction, where silver ions from silver nitrate combine with chloride ions from sodium chloride to form solid silver chloride.
PbCl2 is the molecular formula (not chemical equation) of lead(II) chloride.
The balanced equation for the formation of lead oxide is: 2Pb + O2 → 2PbO
You can separate sodium chloride and lead chloride through a process called fractional crystallization. By slowly cooling a solution containing both salts, sodium chloride will crystallize out first, leaving lead chloride remaining in solution. The two can then be physically separated.