Chemistry, asked by bhaumik20, 11 months ago

did you know this reaction

Hcl+Nacl

Answers

Answered by ritikaamlajiya
1

Answer:

Hcl+Nacl

If you add concentrated HCl solution to a saturated NaCl solution, you will drive the equilibrium of equation 1) back to the left by increasing the concentration of Cl-(aq). As a result, NaCl will re-crystallize in the solution. This is a demonstration of Le Châtelier’s principle that states: if a system in equilibrium is disturbed, it will shift the equilibrium to counteract the disturbance.

1) NaCl(s) ↔ Na+(aq) + Cl-(aq)

2) HCl(aq) ↔ H+(aq) + Cl-(aq)

K= Ksp = [Na+(aq)][Cl-(aq)]

Ka =

[Cl-(aq)] = Ka[HCl(aq)]/[H+(aq)]

Ksp / [Na+(aq)] = Ka[HCl(aq)]/[H+(aq)]

hope it helps you

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Answered by malavikabala012003
1

While it is true that "no reaction happens", ionic compounds split into its cation and anion in water. Since your compounds are aqueous, this equation makes sense:  

NaCl(aq) + HCl(aq) ----> Na+(aq) + H+(aq) + 2Cl-(aq)

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