Reactions in Aqueous Solutions
General Chemistry • 3 topics in this chapter.
This Reactions in Aqueous Solutions chapter in General Chemistry focuses on how ionic compounds behave in water, with interactive calculators and learning tools for electrolytes, solubility rules, precipitation reactions, and writing balanced molecular, complete ionic, and net ionic equations. It also covers common aqueous reaction patterns such as acid–base neutralization and gas-forming reactions, helping you predict products and identify spectator ions correctly.
On this page you can determine whether a compound dissociates, classify strong vs weak electrolytes, predict precipitates using solubility guidelines, and practice net ionic equation construction step by step. Many tools also support solution concentration work (molarity, dilution, and stoichiometry in solution), so you can connect balanced equations to real lab quantities like volumes, moles, and concentrations.
The difficulty level runs from beginner-friendly reaction identification to more advanced ionic-equation and solution stoichiometry problems, making it ideal for high school, AP/IB Chemistry, and introductory college chemistry. Teachers can use it to model aqueous reaction reasoning in class, self-learners can build confidence with guided practice, and advanced users can quickly verify net ionic equations, limiting reactant logic, and concentration calculations for labs and exams.
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1. Disociation and Ionization of Electrolytes
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2. Calculating Ion Concentrations in a Solution of a Strong Electrolyte
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3. Net Ionic Equations Precipitation and Neutralization
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