Chemistry, asked by amarisela, 8 months ago

(NH4)2SO4(aq)+BaCl2(aq) ionic equation

Answers

Answered by nazishkhan22
1

(NH4)2SO4(aq) + BaCl2(aq) → BaSO4(s) + 2NH4Cl(aq) Barium sulfate is the precipitate.

Answered by sadiaanam
0

Answer:

The ionic equation for the reaction between (NH4)2SO4 (ammonium sulfate) and BaCl2 (barium chloride) can be written by first breaking down each compound into their respective ions:

(NH4)2SO4 → 2NH4+ + SO42-

BaCl2 → Ba2+ + 2Cl-

Then, we can combine the ions that react with each other to form the products:

2NH4+ + Ba2+ + SO42- + 2Cl- → BaSO4 + 2NH4+ + 2Cl-

This is the ionic equation for the reaction between ammonium sulfate and barium chloride.

In this reaction, the barium and sulfate ions combine to form an insoluble precipitate, barium sulfate, which can be observed as a white solid.

Meanwhile, the ammonium and chloride ions remain in solution as spectator ions, meaning they do not take part in the reaction but are present in the solution before and after the reaction.

Learn more about Ioinic equations :

https://brainly.in/question/1224736

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