CHEM 1A Lecture Notes - Lecture 8: Chemical Equation, Ion, Ammonium Chloride

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14 Oct 2016
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CHEM 1A Full Course Notes
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Not all ionic compounds dissolve in water. For example, agcl does not dissolve in water, it will not break down into ions. Occur when one product is insoluble in water. Ax + by -> ay + bx: example: kcl(aq) + agno3(aq) -> agcl(s) + kno3(aq) For this to occur, ions must be removed from the solution! This may be due to: the formation of an insoluble solid (a precipitate, the formation of either a soluble weak electrolyte or a soluble nonelectrolyte, the formation of a gas. The cation from one compound can now pair with the anion from the other compound to form new (and potentially insoluble) products. If the potentially insoluble products are both soluble, then no reaction occurs: on a test, write (cid:862)no reaction(cid:863) next to the arrow. If one or both products are insoluble, then a precipitation reaction occurs. Complete ionic equation: break up all compounds into ions on both sides unless it is insoluble.

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