1. Put the mixture of powders in a beaker and add water.
2. Stir vigorously. Sodium chloride is dissolved, barium sulfate not.
3. Filter to separate sodium chloride solution (passes the filter) from barium sulfate as a solid on the filter.
Barium sulfate is insoluble in water; after filtration remain on the filter and sodium chloride pass as a solution.
Barium chloride can be precipitated wit a sulfate; barium sulfate is then filtrated.
By filtration barium sulfate being insoluble in water.
The balanced equation for sodium sulfate (Na2SO4) plus barium chloride (BaCl2) yielding barium sulfate (BaSO4) and sodium chloride (NaCl) is: Na2SO4 + BaCl2 -> BaSO4 + 2NaCl
Which salt are you referring too? Table salt, NaCl does. Most salts do, but some sulfate salts do not, such as barium sulfate (BaSO4).
Barium sulfate is an inorganic compound. During a dissociation reaction, it would separate into its two components, barium and sulfate (Ba 2+ and SO4 2-).
Add water and pass it though a filter. Ammonium sulfate will dissolve in water, barium sulfate will not.
Barium sulphate to barium sulphate is NO CHANGE!
the symbol for barium sulfate is Ba(SO4)2
Barium sulfate is thermally decomposed in barium oxide and sulfur trioxide.
The chemical formula of sodium sulfate is Na2SO4. The chemical formula of barium chloride is BaCl2. BaCl2 + Na2SO4-----------BaSO4 + 2 NaCl BaSO4 is a white, practically insoluble in water precipitate; this property is important in gravimetric analysis.
The compound BaSO4 is known as barium sulfate. Because of its white color, it is sometimes used for pigmentation, especially in paper.