Sodium chloride and lithium chloride are very soluble in water.
LiCl and NaCl are solids; it is impossible to dissolve one in the other.
NaCl
NaCl is easily soluble in water; BaSO4 is insoluble.
Lithium chloride (as NaCl) is an ionic compound.
Precipitate forms when an INSOLUBLE substance is formed. That means you're looking for ions that form insoluble substances when combined with NaOH and LiCl. That means the ions below are all contenders (use the solubility rules): Ag+ Hg+ Pb2+ Note: PbCl2 is SLIGHTLY soluble in HOT water, but in standard conditions, PbCl2 is considered as insoluble. hope this helps.
according to the theory 'like dissolve like',polar solute will dissolve in polar solvent because these solute will ionise and get dissolved in ionised solvent. NaCl---Na+ + Cl- H2O---H+ + OH- thir is not so with acetone which is non-polar in nature.
Group 1 cations (Li+, Na+, K+) are removed as insoluble chlorides (LiCl, NaCl, KCl) because they form stable and insoluble precipitates with chloride ions in acidic solutions. This precipitation process allows for the separation of group 1 cations from other cations present in the solution.
It is a mixture of a salt compound (e.g. NaCl, NaCO2, LiCl, LiCO3, etc.) and water (or another fluid).
Sodium chlorate is very soluble in water.
No it is not soluble in toluene because toluene is nonpolar and nacl is polar
Aluminum dust and NaCl are easily separated, since the former is insoluble in water and the later is highly soluble in water. Put the mixture in water, decant the salty water through a filter, to retain the aluminum dust, and if you want to recover the NaCl, you can then boil away the water.
You could maybe put it in hot water like on a pan with hot water then boil it