Any reaction occur between these two reagents.
These two compounds doesn't react.
The reaction between sodium chloride (NaCl) and silver nitrate (AgNO3) results in the formation of silver chloride (AgCl) which is insoluble. Thus, the net ionic equation isAg^+(aq) + Cl^-(aq) ==> AgCl(s)
CuCl2(aq) + 2AgNO3(aq) = Cu(NO3)2(aq) + 2AgCl(s)
Na2SO4 + CaCl2 → 2 NaCl + CaSO4 Net ionic equation: 2 Na+ + SO4^2- + Ca^2+ + 2 Cl- → CaSO4 + 2 Na+ + 2 Cl-
The net ionic equation for Na^+ + Cl^- is Na^+ + Cl^- → NaCl, which represents the formation of sodium chloride when Na^+ and Cl^- ions combine. This equation shows the reactants and products without including spectator ions that do not participate in the reaction.
To determine the net ionic equation, write out the balanced molecular equation first. Then, write the complete ionic equation with all ions separated. Finally, cancel out spectator ions (ions that appear on both sides of the equation) to arrive at the net ionic equation, which shows only the reacting ions.
To write a net ionic equation from a complete ionic equation, you remove the spectator ions that appear on both sides of the equation. The remaining ions that participate in the reaction are then included in the net ionic equation. This simplifies the equation to show only the ions that undergo a chemical change.
OH- + H+ H2O
the spectator ions are removed
NaCl-------------> Na+ + Cl-
the spectator ions are removed
Yes. If both compounds are insoluable in water then the complete/overall ionic equation and the net ionic equation will look the same. The only way they look different is if there are spectator ions(ions that appear on both sides of the equation).