the purpose of it is to clear the germs present in it.chlorine is added to the water in this process for the purification of water.
I suppose that ammonium hypochlorite hasn't uses.
There is no such substance as Na4Cl NaCl is sodium chloride. NH4Cl is ammonium chloride
Salts made of a metal and a nonmetal are named this way: [metal] [nonmetal root]-ide Examples: sodium + chlorine = sodium chloride potassium + iodine = potassium iodide Salts made from a metal or other complex cation and a nonmetal or other complex anion are named based on the cation and anion names: ------------------------------- ammonium ion + hydroxide ion = ammonium hydroxide sodium ion + hypochlorite ion = sodium hypochlorite calcium ion + chloride ion = calcium chloride
Calcium hypochlorite - Ca(ClO)2 has 5 atoms.
bLeaching powder (not 'beaching' ! ) is sodium hypochlorite, NaClO or calcium hypochlorite, CaCl(OCl) or a mixture of both.
Formula= ClO-
Ammonium hypochlorite
ammonium hypochlorite
ammonium perchlorate
There is no such substance as Na4Cl NaCl is sodium chloride. NH4Cl is ammonium chloride
Donald Duane Miller has written: 'Fundamental factors affecting germicidal activities of certain hypochlorite and quaternary ammonium compounds' -- subject(s): Disinfection and disinfectants, Ammonium compounds as disinfectants
It depends on what purpose you are replacing it for.
The purpose of the ammonium acetate in the gravimetric determination of aluminium as oxinate is as a buffer. As more ammonium acetate is added, this caused the complex of the aluminium in the solution to precipitate after the yellow supernatant was formed. Excess ammonium acetate is needed to ensure all of the crystals precipitated out completely.
It is an ionic substance called Sodium Hyphoclorite. Sodium Hypochlorite is an alkaline, corrosive, light yellow solution. It is formed when caustic soda (NaOH) and chlorine (Cl2) react. It is widely used for its bleaching, disinfecting and oxidizing properties. Sodium Hypochlorite shows, as well as chlorine, a very high reactivity and oxidizing power, but as a solution it is much easier to handle than chlorine.
It gives essential Nitrogen and Phosphorusnutrients to the plants
No, it is a hypochlorite.
The formula for hypochlorite is: ClO-
(NH4)+ is Ammonium ion and (CLO3)- is chlorate ion; therefore, the name of the substance would be: Ammonium Chlorate. It is an inorganic compound. It crystallizes in small needles, readily soluble in water. It decomposes at about 102 °C, with liberation of nitrogen, chlorine and oxygen. It is soluble in dilute aqueous alcohol, but insoluble in strong alcohol. Ammonium Chlorate is obtained by neutralizing chloric acid with either ammonia or ammonium carbonate, or by precipitating barium, strontium or calcium chlorates with ammonium carbonate or ammonium sulfate, producing the respective carbonate or sulfate precipitate and an ammonium chlorate solution. Ammonium chlorate is a strong oxidizer and should never be stored with flammable materials. It is very unstable, and will decompose, sometimes violently, at room temperature. This results from the mixture of the reducing ammonium cation and the oxidizing chlorate anion. Even solutions are known to be unstable. Because of the dangerous nature of this salt it should only be kept in solution when needed, and never be allowed to crystallize.