How do we write a balanced equation (not ionic) for the reduction of NaClO3 into ClO2 (SO2 is oxidized into SO42-)?
I've gotten the idea that even when writing ionic equations, if we've got an acid such as HClO3, it's best to keep this acid together. e.g. don't write the half-equation starting with the ClO3- ion but rather with HClO3 as a whole, and this will change the number of H+ we add later to balance the hydrogens, etc.
For ionic equations, I would normally leave out the Na+ and treat the anions only for this case, as Na+ must be a spectator, but we want an overall balanced equation, not ionic, to be the final result. How do I work it out?