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Chlorine
Nitrogen and ammonium chloride are formed with a limited amount of chlorine. In the presence of excess of chlorine, nitrogen trichloride is formed. ..
Mechanism of Reaction
Mechanism of Reaction - A balanced chemical equation represents the overall result of a chemical reaction. However, at the molecular level, more than one reaction step might be involved. Most reactions can be broken down into a sequence of elementar..
Mechanism of Reaction - A balanced chemical equation represents the overall result of a chemical reaction. However, at the molecular level, more than one reaction step might be involved. Most reactions can be broken down into a sequence of elementar..Addition Reactions of Chlorine
With metals - Besides the above reactions of chlorine with metals, chlorine also undergoes addition reactions with heated metals like aluminium, zinc, iron, etc. to form their chlorides. Metals with variable valencies always form the chloride of the higher me..
Chemical Properties of Chlorine - Addition Reactions
With metals Besides the above reactions of chlorine with metals, chlorine also undergoes addition reactions with heated metals like aluminium, zinc, iron, etc. to form their chlorides. Metals with variable valencies always form the chloride of th..
Atomicity of Hydrogen and Chlorine
Let up take the example of the same reaction between hydrogen and chlorine. We saw earlier that;..
Chemical Properties of Chlorine - As an Oxidizing Agent
All the reactions especially those of chlorine with metals are examples of redox reactions. Example: With sodium Being one electron short in the outermost orbit, chlorine readily accepts electrons. Thus when combining with metals, it oxidises the metal by acc..
All the reactions especially those of chlorine with metals are examples of redox reactions. Example: With sodium Being one electron short in the outermost orbit, chlorine readily accepts electrons. Thus when combining with metals, it oxidises the metal by acc..Mechanism of esterification of carboxylic acids
>The above mechanism is supported by the using isotopically labeled methanol (CH 3 O 18 H) with acetic acid to give methyl acetate (having labeled oxygen) and water not containing any isotopic oxyge..
Substitution reactions
At elevated temperatures (500°C), higher alkenes give substitution products with chlorine. For example, CH 3 -CH=CH 2 + Cl 2 ClCH 2 -CH=CH 2 +HCl propene 3-chloropropene Branched-chain alkenes give substitution re..
Oxidation reactions
It oxidises lead sulphide to lead sulphate Halogen acids are oxidized to corresponding halogens (e.g. hydrochloric acid is oxidized to chlorine.)..
It oxidises lead sulphide to lead sulphate Halogen acids are oxidized to corresponding halogens (e.g. hydrochloric acid is oxidized to chlorine.).. Result
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