The name of an exsisting chemical coming close to the incorrectly spelled "hydrochlorine" is:
Hydrochloric acid or hydrogen chloride for the substance (or solution of) HCl (historically and trivially called muriatic acid)
The name of an exsisting chemical coming close to the incorrectly spelled "hydrochlorine" is:Hydrochloric acid or hydrogen chloride for the substance (or solution of) HCl (historically and trivially called muriatic acid)
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[The name is misspelled: it should be ..... hydrochloride]Pyridoxine is one of the compounds that are grouped in the vitamin B6-complex (along with pyridoxal and pyridoxamine).It is often used as 'pyridoxine hydrochloride', the muriatic salt of pyridoxine.4,5-Bis(hydroxymethyl)-2-methylpyridin-3-ol-hydrogenchloride,C8H11NO3.HCl(source: wikipedia)
What is 'hcl'???? If you mean 'HCl'. then it is a compound of hydrogen combined to chlorine. To for form hydrogen chloride gas , or dissolved in weater to form hydrochloric acid. NB When writing chemical formula, single letter element are ALWAYS a CAPITAL letter , Hence hydrogen is 'H' not 'h' and similarly a two letter symbol ; first letter is a CAPITAL letter and the second letter is small /lower case. hence chlorine is 'Cl'. not 'cl'. This is the recognised IUPAC international standard and is shown in the Periodic Table.
You can NOT dissolve 'covalent BONDS' because a bond is one couple of two electrons which hold their two 'parent' atoms together in one molecule.Try asking the question again with what you want to know, not what you have only 'heard of'.
The I2 molecules in iodine are not very soluble in water because they are not alike. I2 is non-polar whereas H2O is polar. But KI solution contains I- ions which combine with the I2 molecules to form I3- ions because these are charged they dissolve in the water which is a polar solvent.