A single displacement reaction
An alkyl halide is obtained.
Benzene reacts with chlorine at room temperature without the need for a catalyst. This reaction occurs through a substitution reaction where one or more hydrogen atoms in benzene are replaced by chlorine atoms to form chlorobenzene.
Osmium replaced Lead Silver replaced Gold Cobalt replaced Iron Gallium replaced Mercury Zinc replaced Tin Iridium replaced Platinum In another book: Barium Calcium Plutonium Aluminum Sodium Zirconium
Ethyne contains sp2 hybrid orbitals, so if you replaced a hydrogen with a fluorine you should have the situation you want.
Zn(s) + 2AgNO3(aq) --> Zn(NO3)2(aq) + 2Ag(s) is a single displacement reaction. It is also called a single replacement reaction. As you can see, the zinc displaced, or replaced, the silver in the silver nitrate solution.
When fluorine gas combines with aqueous sodium chloride (NaCl) solution, the chlorine in the NaCl is replaced by fluorine to form sodium fluoride (NaF) and chlorine gas (Cl2) is released as a byproduct. This reaction is a displacement reaction where the more reactive element (fluorine) displaces the less reactive element (chlorine) in the compound.
A hydrocarbon with all the hydrogen atoms replaced with either chlorine atoms or fluorine atoms. They cannot be all chlorine or all fluorine atoms, but must be some mixture.
No, Teflon is a polymer of tetrafluoroethylene, not ethylene. In Teflon, the hydrogens in ethylene have been replaced by fluorine atoms, not chlorine.
Chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs) are hydrocarbons in which some or all of the hydrogen atoms are replaced by chlorine and fluorine. These chemicals were commonly used in refrigerants, propellants, and solvents but are now known to be harmful to the ozone layer.
The single replacement reaction between potassium iodide (KI) and chlorine gas (Cl2) would produce potassium chloride (KCl) and iodine (I2) as products. The balanced chemical equation for this reaction is 2KI + Cl2 -> 2KCl + I2.
Replacement (or displacement) in Chemistry is when a molecule or atom is replaced by a more reactive molecule or atom, within a compound. This is most commonly seen in the halogens (group 7 elements).For example, if you react potassium chloride with fluorine, you get potassium fluoride and chlorine:KCl + F --> KF + ClFluorine is more reactive than chlorine, and so it displaces/replaces chlorine in the potassium compound.B
This would be an oxidation-reduction reaction (or a single replacement reaction). On the left side of the equation, chlorine (Cl) has a negative charge, because it is bonded to sodium (Na). After it goes through the reaction, it is replaced by fluorine (F), making it Cl2 on the product side. As a atom that is not bonded, its charge is 0. The charge on Cl went from -1 to 0, so it is oxidized. The other anion, F, is reduced (the charge decreases from 0 to -1.
Electrons are shared between the chlorine atoms and the bromine atoms.
An alkyl halide is obtained.
The reaction between sodium bromide (NaBr) and chlorine (Cl2) is a redox reaction, specifically a synthesis reaction. In this reaction, sodium bromide reacts with chlorine gas to form sodium chloride and bromine gas.
This reaction would be called a single replacement reaction because only one parts of the compound (NaBr) is being replaced. The anion (negatively charged part of the compound) is replaced since Fluorine has a charge of -1. Sodium has a charge of +1 and Bromine has a charge of -1, so Bromine is replaced by Fluorine. I have balanced the equation below to illustrate the reaction.F2 + 2 NaBr -> 2 NaF + Br2
The reaction between aluminum bromide and chlorine gas to form aluminum chloride and bromine gas is a redox reaction, specifically a single displacement reaction. In this reaction, aluminum undergoes oxidation by losing electrons to chlorine to form aluminum chloride, while chlorine is reduced by gaining electrons from aluminum bromide to form bromine gas.