Sulfur chloride
When sulfur reacts with chlorine to produce disulfur dichloride, the name of the compound corresponds to a chemical formula of S2Cl2, which shows that the same numbers of atoms of each element are needed to form the compound. The gram atomic mass of sulfur is 32.06, and the gram atomic mass of chlorine is 35.453. 200.2 grams of sulfur corresponds to 200.2/32.06 or about 6.2445 gram atoms of sulfur, while 100.3 grams of chlorine corresponds to 100.3/35.453 or about 2.83 gram atoms of chlorine. Therefore, chlorine is the limiting reactant among these amounts of sulfur and chlorine.
The resulting chemical compound of this reaction is a chloride.
No, it`s not possible to get any ionic compound by reacting chlorine and hydrogen together, all you'll get is Hydrogen Chloride.
When carbon reacts with chlorine, the result is a covalent compound, specifically, carbon tetrachloride. And of course, all sorts of organic compounds can be chlorinated by partial or complete replacement of hydrogen atoms by chlorine. But the compound will never be ionic.
2Al + 3Cl2 -> 2AlCl3 aluminium reacts with chlorine gas to form aluminium trichloride.
calcium sulfide :))
S + 2Cl --> SCl2
Sodium (Na) reacts with chlorine to form sodium chloride (NaCl), which is an ionic substance
When sulfur reacts with chlorine to produce disulfur dichloride, the name of the compound corresponds to a chemical formula of S2Cl2, which shows that the same numbers of atoms of each element are needed to form the compound. The gram atomic mass of sulfur is 32.06, and the gram atomic mass of chlorine is 35.453. 200.2 grams of sulfur corresponds to 200.2/32.06 or about 6.2445 gram atoms of sulfur, while 100.3 grams of chlorine corresponds to 100.3/35.453 or about 2.83 gram atoms of chlorine. Therefore, chlorine is the limiting reactant among these amounts of sulfur and chlorine.
The resulting chemical compound of this reaction is a chloride.
No, it`s not possible to get any ionic compound by reacting chlorine and hydrogen together, all you'll get is Hydrogen Chloride.
Sodium reacts with chlorine to form sodium chloride which is an ionic compound. It has a crystalline structure and has no molecules.
Aluminum sulfate Al2(SO4)3 will form when aluminum reacts with sulfur in the presence of oxygen.
yes
When carbon reacts with chlorine, the result is a covalent compound, specifically, carbon tetrachloride. And of course, all sorts of organic compounds can be chlorinated by partial or complete replacement of hydrogen atoms by chlorine. But the compound will never be ionic.
Lithium reacts with fluorine to form an ionic compound, LiF. The rest all form covalent compounds
No - chlorine reacts to form chlorides - not bromides