NaCl
The product of this reaction is salt:NaOH + HCl = NaCl + H2O
When you add CaCC3 and HCl together, a reaction can occur where the HCl will likely dissociate into H+ ions and Cl- ions in solution due to its acidic nature. The CaCC3 compound may also dissociate into its ions. However, the specific products of the reaction would depend on the exact chemical properties of CaCC3.
Correctly represented, it's Mg + 2HCl --> MgCl2 + H2, and it's a single replacement reaction.
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NaCl
if there is the same number of atoms on both sides e.g Mg + HcI-------------> Mg + HcI^2 (HcI squared) this is an unbalanced reaction because there is more chlorine on the right side than the left side. so when you balance the equation it will look like this: MG + HcI^2------------------>Mg +HcI^2
CaCl2 and H2O
hello
NaCl and H2O
First, its HCl, with a lowercase L, not HCI. The reaction is HCl + NaOH --> H2O + NaCl
The product of this reaction is salt:NaOH + HCl = NaCl + H2O
When you add CaCC3 and HCl together, a reaction can occur where the HCl will likely dissociate into H+ ions and Cl- ions in solution due to its acidic nature. The CaCC3 compound may also dissociate into its ions. However, the specific products of the reaction would depend on the exact chemical properties of CaCC3.
Mixing hydrochloric acid (HCI) with sodium hydroxide (NaOH) in water (H2O) will result in a neutralization reaction, producing sodium chloride (NaCl) and water. The balanced chemical equation for this reaction is: HCl + NaOH → NaCl + H2O.
Correctly represented, it's Mg + 2HCl --> MgCl2 + H2, and it's a single replacement reaction.
Correctly represented, it's Mg + 2HCl --> MgCl2 + H2, and it's a single replacement reaction.
To adjust pH and/or lower alkalinity.