Strontium chloride is a compound of lithium and chlorine with the formula SrCl2.
Lithium chloride is a compound of lithium and chlorine with the formula LiCl.
No, lithium and strontium are both metals. Ionic compounds occur between metals and non-metals. They are both positively charged, so an ionic bond would not be attainable.
Because strontium sulfate is much less soluble in water than strontium chloride, sodium chloride, or sodium sulfate, this reaction is: Na2SO4 (aq) + SrCl2 (aq) => 2 NaCl (aq) + SrSO4 (s).
They both produce a red flame in different shades of red, which is often hard to distingiush which shade.
Lithium (Li), Xenon (Xe), Oxygen (O), Potassium (K), Zinc (Zn), Strontium (Sr).
The key difference between sodium and sodium chloride is that sodium is a chemical element whereas sodium chloride is a compound containing both sodium and chlorine chemical elements.
A better question would be "which elements burn red", as more than one element burns red. Lithium chloride burns red, calcium chloride burnds a red-orange, and strontium chloride burns bright red.
Lithium + Chloride = Lithium Chloride
Lithium
Lithium Chloride
The equation [not formula] for the reaction between zinc chloride and lithium is 2 Li + ZnCl2 -> 2 LiCl + Zn.
In an ionic compound the charges of all the ions must balance out to zero. The chloride ion has a charge of -1. Lithium and potassium ions both have a +1 charge. So these ions will combine in a 1:1 ration. By contrast, barium, strontium, and calcium all form ions with a 2+ charge, so in order to balance the charges, chloride ions must combine with these metals in a 2:1 ratio.
LiCl is the chemical formula of of lithium chloride.
lithium chloride LiCl
Strontium chloride creates the red of road flares, lithium chloride also produces a red flame. Calcium chloride is supposed to produce red, but is perceived as a deep orange flame.
No, lithium and strontium are both metals. Ionic compounds occur between metals and non-metals. They are both positively charged, so an ionic bond would not be attainable.
Because strontium sulfate is much less soluble in water than strontium chloride, sodium chloride, or sodium sulfate, this reaction is: Na2SO4 (aq) + SrCl2 (aq) => 2 NaCl (aq) + SrSO4 (s).
The formula for lithium chloride is LiCl.