Is precipitation always involved in a double displacement reaction?

1 Answer
Jun 9, 2018

Not necessarily.

Explanation:

There are a variety of spontaneous double displacement reactions. Some but not all of them involve the production of a precipitate.

For example, the neutralization reaction between hydrochloric acid HCl and sodium hydroxide NaOH counts as a double displacement reaction. However, this reaction produces no precipitate.

NaOH(aq)+HCl(aq)NaCl(aq)+H2O(l)

Neutralization reactions are feasible as double displacement reaction thanks to the production of water H2O, a weak electrolyte that barely disassociate on its own. Meaning that as the reaction proceeds, the formation of water would act like a H+ / OH sink that continuously removes the two ions from the system.

Other types of reactions, such as those involving the evolution of a gas e.g., CO2 or NH3 can also be spontaneous. Here's a list of them on the English Wikipedia.