Chemistry, asked by gurkiratdhaliwal2006, 10 months ago

20 g of sodium and 10g chlorine combine and make sodium chloride what is the total mass of sodium chloride?

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Answers

Answered by YAJJURASU
1

Sodium is a silver-colored metal which is soft enough to cut with a knife.  It is an extremely reactive metal, and is always found naturally in ionic compounds, not in its pure metallic form.  Pure sodium metal reacts violently (and sometimes explosively) with water, producing sodium hydroxide, hydrogen gas, and heat:

Sodium is a silver-colored metal which is soft enough to cut with a knife.  It is an extremely reactive metal, and is always found naturally in ionic compounds, not in its pure metallic form.  Pure sodium metal reacts violently (and sometimes explosively) with water, producing sodium hydroxide, hydrogen gas, and heat:2Na(s)  +  2H2O(l)  ——>  2NaOH(aq)  +  H2(g)

Sodium is a silver-colored metal which is soft enough to cut with a knife.  It is an extremely reactive metal, and is always found naturally in ionic compounds, not in its pure metallic form.  Pure sodium metal reacts violently (and sometimes explosively) with water, producing sodium hydroxide, hydrogen gas, and heat:2Na(s)  +  2H2O(l)  ——>  2NaOH(aq)  +  H2(g)Chlorine is a poisonous, yellow-green gas, with a very sharp odor, and was used in gas warfare during World War I.

Sodium is a silver-colored metal which is soft enough to cut with a knife.  It is an extremely reactive metal, and is always found naturally in ionic compounds, not in its pure metallic form.  Pure sodium metal reacts violently (and sometimes explosively) with water, producing sodium hydroxide, hydrogen gas, and heat:2Na(s)  +  2H2O(l)  ——>  2NaOH(aq)  +  H2(g)Chlorine is a poisonous, yellow-green gas, with a very sharp odor, and was used in gas warfare during World War I.Sodium and chlorine react with each other, however, to produce a substance that is familiar to almost everyone in the world:  sodium chloride, or table salt:

Sodium is a silver-colored metal which is soft enough to cut with a knife.  It is an extremely reactive metal, and is always found naturally in ionic compounds, not in its pure metallic form.  Pure sodium metal reacts violently (and sometimes explosively) with water, producing sodium hydroxide, hydrogen gas, and heat:2Na(s)  +  2H2O(l)  ——>  2NaOH(aq)  +  H2(g)Chlorine is a poisonous, yellow-green gas, with a very sharp odor, and was used in gas warfare during World War I.Sodium and chlorine react with each other, however, to produce a substance that is familiar to almost everyone in the world:  sodium chloride, or table salt:2Na(s)  +  Cl2(g)  ——>  2NaCl(s)

Sodium is a silver-colored metal which is soft enough to cut with a knife.  It is an extremely reactive metal, and is always found naturally in ionic compounds, not in its pure metallic form.  Pure sodium metal reacts violently (and sometimes explosively) with water, producing sodium hydroxide, hydrogen gas, and heat:2Na(s)  +  2H2O(l)  ——>  2NaOH(aq)  +  H2(g)Chlorine is a poisonous, yellow-green gas, with a very sharp odor, and was used in gas warfare during World War I.Sodium and chlorine react with each other, however, to produce a substance that is familiar to almost everyone in the world:  sodium chloride, or table salt:2Na(s)  +  Cl2(g)  ——>  2NaCl(s)It is easy to see why this reaction takes place so readily when we look at it on an atomic level:  sodium has one electron in its outermost (valence) shell, while chlorine has seven electrons in its valence shell.  When a sodium atom transfers an electron to a chlorine atom, forming a sodium cation (Na+) and a chloride anion (Cl-), both ions have complete valence shells, and are energetically more stable. 

Answered by vansh18112004
1

Answer:

35.5 g cl gives 58.5 g nacl

10g cl will produce=58.5/35.5×10

=16.5g nacl

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