There is no way that pure chemicals can be mixed together easily to make KClO3, but it is alot easier to do so with match heads. Cut the heads off of as many matches as you can. Put them in a beaker with water and boil then until the paste is gone from the wood. Filter the mixture with coffee paper a few times which will remove the wood, sulfur and other non-soluble ingredients . Whats left will be the Potassium (per)chlorate solution. Now just boil this down so there is a small amount of water left then let it sit so the rest of the water will evaporate.
Potassium Chlorate. It is commonly used with other chemicals as a flammable or explosive mixture.
The reaction between H2SO3 and KClO3 does not occur. H2SO3 is a weak acid, and KClO3 is a salt. There is no precipitation, gas evolution, or significant heat release that would indicate a chemical reaction taking place between these two substances.
The standard molar entropy (ΔS) of potassium chlorate (KClO3) is 155 J/mol·K at 298 K.
68 g of KClO3 must be heated to produce as much O2 as would be obtained from 50 g of HgO.
There is no such thing as KCIO3. That should be a lowercase L, not an I. (all two-letter element symbols use a lowercase for the second letter) That being said, KClO3 is Potassium Chlorate. K = Potassium Cl = Chlorine O = Oxygen 3 = number of Oxygen atoms in the molecule
Potassium chlorate (KClO3) has 3 oxygen atoms.
The formula for potassium chlorate is KClO3.
The percent of oxygen in KClO3 is 48.4%. This can be calculated by dividing the molar mass of oxygen in KClO3 (48 g/mol) by the molar mass of KClO3 (122.55 g/mol) and multiplying by 100%.
The atomicity of KClO3 is one, which means that in one molecule of KClO3, there is one atom each of potassium (K), chlorine (Cl), and oxygen (O).
The formula (not symbol) is KClO3
KClO3
The name of the compound with the formula KClO3 is "potassium chlorate".
No, KClO3 is not the same as potassium chloride. KClO3 is potassium chlorate, a compound that contains potassium, chlorine, and oxygen. Potassium chloride, on the other hand, is a compound that contains only potassium and chlorine.
The reaction between H2SO3 and KClO3 does not occur. H2SO3 is a weak acid, and KClO3 is a salt. There is no precipitation, gas evolution, or significant heat release that would indicate a chemical reaction taking place between these two substances.
2 grams of Oxygen can be obtained from 5 grams of KClO3 (only if the "CL" means "Cl", which is Chlorine! Remember that only the first letter of the atomic symbol is capitalized.)
2 KClO3 ------ 2KCl + 3O2 so 2 moles of KClO3 produces two mole of KCl. Therefore 0.440 moles of potassium chlorate will produce 0.44 moles of KCl - potassium chloride.
The oxidation number of Cl in KClO3 is +5. This is determined by assigning -2 to O and +1 to K, and then setting up an equation to find Cl's oxidation number based on the overall charge of KClO3.
O2 is oxygen molecule; KCl is potassium chloride