It is a common salt substitute. You can buy it in grocery stores. Just look at the ingredient list of the salt substitutes.
Two different elements. They are potassium and chlorine.
Calcium chloride and potassium chloride are pure substances.
Both potassium chloride and calcium chloride are strong electrolytes when dissolved in water or when molten.
It depends. It is most likely potassium chloride and lithium carbonate
You can make potassium chloride precipitate by adding silver nitrate (AgNO3). The chemical equation being AgNO3(aq)+ KCl(aq) = KNO3(aq) + AgCl(s) You know that silver nitrate will form a precipitate as you can see this on a solubility chart.
no
Potassium chloride
No, potassium chloride contains potassium chloride.
No, reacting zinc with hydrogen chloride will yield zinc chloride and hydrogen gas. Potassium chloride can be prepared by reacting potassium with hydrogen chloride or (more safely) potassium hydroxide with hydrogen chloride.
Potassium chloride is react with AgNO3 , the chloride ion subtract from potassium chloride to form silver chloride precipitate and potassium nirate. KCl + AgNO3 → KNO3 + AgCl↓
Potassium Chloride in fact 2 Potassium Chloride
Potassium + Chlorine --> Potassium Chloride (potassium plus chlorine arrow potassium chloride)
KCl is 'potassium chloride'.
No, potassium chloride is not an acid. It is a salt composed of potassium and chloride ions.
Yes, potassium chloride is a compound. It is composed of the elements potassium and chlorine, which are chemically bonded to form potassium chloride.
I'm guessing you meant KCl or potassium chloride.
Potassium chloride (KCl) is not a hydrate.