I'm not sure I understand the question, but if you're asking what you get when you react elemental sodium (a reactive, caustic metal) and elemental chlorine (a reactive, poisonous, greenish-yellow halogen gas), the answer is sodium chloride, ordinary table salt.
To determine the limiting reactant between AgNO3 and NaCl, you need to compare their stoichiometry in the reaction. Calculate the amount of product that can be formed from each reactant using stoichiometry. The reactant that produces the least amount of product is the limiting reactant.
There is no NaCl2. It would simply be NaCl and the reactant would be HCl and NaOH. Thus,HCl + NaOH ==> NaCl + H2O
2NaOHaq + 2HClaq --> 2NaClaq + H2Ol is the perfect balanced equatiion,except the solubility (aq) of NaCl, so it is notNaCls but NaClaq
In some reactions water is a reactant, but in others it is a product. Ex: HCl + NaOH --> NaCl + water (water is a product) Na + water --> NaOH + hydrogen gas (water is a reactant)
In this reaction, the limiting reactant is whichever reactant is completely consumed first and limits the amount of product that can be formed. To determine the limiting reactant, you would need to compare the stoichiometry of the reactants. The reactant that provides the least amount of product based on the balanced equation is the limiting reactant.
The reactant in its natural state is in its original form before any chemical reaction occurs. It is typically the starting material that undergoes a transformation in a chemical reaction to produce one or more products.
NO. There is no chlorine on the reactant side, so it cannot be balanced.
Sodium chloride doesn't react with water; after dissolution NaCl is dissociated in Na+ and Cl-.
1. That a reactant is added: NaCl + AgNO3 = NaNO3 + AgCl 2. It is also in the symbols of cations: Na+, Fe2+, Al3+ etc.
Depending on the reaction, may be reactant or product.
The Limiting Reactant is the reactant that runs out first in a reaction.
reactant