yes 100% for sure
it is a salt and therefore ionic is is however slightly soluble in polar solutions
The name of Cacl is calcium Chloride
At 90 degrees Celsius, potassium nitrate (KNO₃) is one of the most soluble salts in water. Its solubility increases significantly with temperature, reaching about 62 grams per 100 milliliters of water at this temperature. Other highly soluble salts at elevated temperatures include sodium nitrate (NaNO₃) and calcium chloride (CaCl₂), but potassium nitrate is particularly notable for its high solubility.
"cacl" does not exist because it is likely a misspelling or a non-existent command. It could be a typo for "calc" which stands for calculator, but without further context, it is difficult to provide a specific answer. Please provide more information for a better response.
To find the total ions in 347 g of CaCl₂, first calculate the number of moles of CaCl₂ using its molar mass, which is approximately 110.98 g/mol. Dividing 347 g by the molar mass gives about 3.13 moles of CaCl₂. Each formula unit of CaCl₂ dissociates into one calcium ion (Ca²⁺) and two chloride ions (Cl⁻), totaling three ions per formula unit. Therefore, the total number of ions is 3.13 moles × 3 ions/mole = approximately 9.39 moles of ions, or about 5.65 × 10²⁴ ions.
it is a salt and therefore ionic is is however slightly soluble in polar solutions
The name of Cacl is calcium Chloride
CaCl will separate into individual ions when placed into water. Look at your periodic table Ca2+Cl-
Calcium chloride (chemical formula CaCl) is a salt. it can be a solid, or it can be dissolved in water.
That answer is CaCl
CaCl
To prepare a 25 mL solution of 2M calcium chloride (CaCl₂), you need to calculate the amount of CaCl₂ required. First, use the formula: [ \text{Molarity (M)} = \frac{\text{moles of solute}}{\text{volume of solution in liters}} ] For a 2M solution in 0.025 L (25 mL), you need 0.05 moles of CaCl₂. The molar mass of CaCl₂ is approximately 110.98 g/mol, so you would weigh out about 5.55 grams of CaCl₂ and dissolve it in enough water to make a final volume of 25 mL.
1
Cacl^2
Not a clue, but CaCl2 is calcium chloride.
I don't know at all it has ben unanswered
"cacl" does not exist because it is likely a misspelling or a non-existent command. It could be a typo for "calc" which stands for calculator, but without further context, it is difficult to provide a specific answer. Please provide more information for a better response.