Science, asked by xyzell, 9 months ago

is barium sulfate the white precipitate formed when sodium sulfate reacts with barium chloride to give barium sulfate and sodium chloride???​

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Answered by sg249344
1

</p><p>&lt;head&gt;</p><p></p><p>&lt;style type="text/css" media="all"&gt;</p><p></p><p>body {</p><p>	font-family: Sans-Serif;</p><p>	background-image: linear-gradient(45deg, rgb(136, 82, 214) 0%, rgb(136, 82, 214) 16%,rgb(143, 106, 215) 16%, rgb(143, 106, 215) 20%,rgb(150, 131, 215) 20%, rgb(150, 131, 215) 26%,rgb(156, 155, 216) 26%, rgb(156, 155, 216) 99%,rgb(163, 179, 216) 99%, rgb(163, 179, 216) 100%);</p><p>}</p><p>	p{</p><p>		color:# ;</p><p>		padding: 20px;</p><p>		text-align: center;</p><p>		font-weight: 400;</p><p>	}</p><p>	</p><p>	.double{</p><p>		border-bottom: 2px double red;</p><p>		</p><p>	}</p><p>  </p><p>  </p><p>  	</p><p>  	</p><p> </p><p></p><p>&lt;/style&gt;</p><p>&lt;/head&gt;</p><p>	&lt;body&gt;</p><p>		</p><p>&lt;p&gt;&lt;span class="double"&gt;Solution To Your Question&lt;/span&gt;&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;</p><p>When barium chloride combines with sodium sulphate in the form of their aqueous solutions, a white precipitate of barium sulphate is formed which is insoluble in water. The reaction also creates sodium chloride, which remains dissolved in water and so cannot be seen. ... So this reaction is a chemical change.</p><p>&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;</p><p>Hope You Liked It</p><p>&lt;/p&gt;</p><p></p><p>&lt;marquee&gt; &lt;b&gt;Mark Me as the brainliest &amp;#128151;</p><p>&lt;br&gt;</p><p>&lt;/b&gt;&lt;/marquee&gt;</p><p></p><p></p><p></p><p>	&lt;/body&gt;</p><p></p><p></p><p>

Answered by BIGDADDYG
0

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