Yes, ammonium chloride can sublime.
NH4Cl sublimes as white fumes.
Ammonium chloride
When NH4Cl is heated, it decomposes into NH3 gas and HCl gas. The balanced chemical equation for this reaction is: NH4Cl(s) -> NH3(g) + HCl(g).
The cation of NH4Cl is NH4+, which is the ammonium ion.
Sodium chloride doesn't sublime.
The ionic compound formula for ammonium chloride is NH4Cl.
Ammonium chloride is an inorganic compound also called NH4Cl.
NH4Cl sublimes as white fumes.
The formula for ammonium chloride is NH4Cl.
Ammonium Chloride! Hope this helps! :)
Ammonium chloride
When NH4Cl is heated, it decomposes into NH3 gas and HCl gas. The balanced chemical equation for this reaction is: NH4Cl(s) -> NH3(g) + HCl(g).
The reaction between NH4Cl and H2SO4 produces NH4HSO4 and HCl. The balanced chemical equation is: NH4Cl + H2SO4 → NH4HSO4 + HCl
Sublime is actually a French word, so you just say sublime!
Usually, ammonia in water solution is presented as NH3.H2O (sometimes NH4OH which is rather incorrect) then NH3.H2O + HCl = NH4Cl + H2O but also this reaction is correct NH3 + HCl = NH4Cl
ammonium chloride
- log(0.001 M NH4Cl) = 3 pH =====