Matter cannot be made or destroyed, so it is impossible to derive AgCl from NaNO3 through natural means. Therefore, the answer would be no sodium nitrate can be made if I'm not missing something in the question.
It is necessary to determine the concentrations of sodium and chlorine using analytical chemistry methods or to determine gravimetrically NaCl with silver nitrate.
If you have the solid of whatever your testing and you burn it (flame test) it will burn with an orange flame if sodium is present. To establish whether it is sodium CHLORIDE, ad a solution of what your testing to silver nitrate and it should form a white precipitate if it's sodium chloride.
To determine the mass of silver chloride produced, we need to know the balanced chemical equation for the reaction between silver nitrate (AgNO3) and sodium chloride (NaCl) that produces silver chloride (AgCl) as a precipitate. Once we have the balanced equation, we can use the stoichiometry of the reaction to determine the number of moles of AgCl produced, and then convert that to mass using the molar mass of AgCl.
Yes, using silver nitrate.
Extraction has no meaning as a specific, particular process. The question makes no sense.
- Potentiometric titration with silver nitrate (AgNO3) - Titration (manual) with silver nitrate (AgNO3) or mercuric thiocyanate - Chronopotentiometry - Using ISE (Ion Selective Electrode) for Cl-
You cannot do that. You can only make sodium nitrate using a different process (search Youtube) or buy it.
this is because nitrate reductase test using the production of nitrite from nitrate as a measure of nitrate reductase activity
No because sodium acetate is soluble in water
This is the blood pressure.
Sodium and chlorine
1 mole of Na2SO4 is 142.05 or 142.1 when using 4 significant figures