The difference between potassium nitrate and potassium sulphate is that the potassium nitrate is superior to potassium sulphate. The potassium nitrate has high solubility while the potassium sulphate has moderate solubility.
sodium nitrate on heating gives a reddish brown gas (nitrogen di oxide) which turns acidified potassium dichromate soln. brown;but, sodium sulphate on heating gives a colourless gas which turns acidified potassium dichromate green due formation of chromic sulphate
Yes one has potassium and is used in smoke bombs and the other has ammonium ion and is used in high explosives like tannerite, and the Oklahoma bombing.
Yes. One contains potassium and the other contains sodium. Whether this makes a difference for your particular application or not depends on what you're trying to do with it.
"Saltpeter" usually means potassium nitrate, but it's sometimes used for sodium nitrate also, or a mixture of the two.
Potassium is a elemental metal, potassium nitrate is a compound containing the potassium atom attached to a nitrate ion to form a molecule (KNO3)
potassium chloride kcl and potassium nitrate kno3.
one's called nitrate
Sodium chloride is a compound of the elements sodium (Na) and chlorine (Cl) and has the formula NaCl. In consists of sodium ions (Na+) and Chloride ions (Cl-). It is relatively unreactive chemically. It is commonly known as table salt. Potassium nitrate is a compound of the elements potassium (K), nitrogen (N), and oxygen (O) and has the formula KNO3. It consists of potassium ions (K+) and nitrate ions (NO3-). It is fairly highly reactive as it is a strong oxidizer. It is commonly known as saltpeter.
When clhlorine is added to silver nitrate a milky white precipitate of Silver Chloride is formed. Potassium nitrate is also formed. When chlorine is added to potassium chloride nothing visible happens but the solutiuon become more acidic.
Do you mean: Na+Cl- + K+N03- --------> K+Cl- + Na+NO3- Sodium + Potassium ---> Potassium + Sodium Chloride Nitrate Chloride Nitrate
It looks translucent.
Potassium chloride is the answer as it would've neutralised the other liquid and the salt is potassium nitrate and therefore is named after like the salt and neutralisation put in.
no
Ammonium nitrate is NH4NO3 Ammonium chloride is NH4Cl
Sodium chloride is a compound of the elements sodium (Na) and chlorine (Cl) and has the formula NaCl. In consists of sodium ions (Na+) and Chloride ions (Cl-). It is relatively unreactive chemically. It is commonly known as table salt. Potassium nitrate is a compound of the elements potassium (K), nitrogen (N), and oxygen (O) and has the formula KNO3. It consists of potassium ions (K+) and nitrate ions (NO3-). It is fairly highly reactive as it is a strong oxidizer. It is commonly known as saltpeter.
the reaction is as follows-AgNO3 + KCl ----->AgCl +KNO3here the silver nitrate(AgNO3) reacts with potassium chloride(KCl) to form potassium nitrate(KNO3) and insoluble AgCl.
When clhlorine is added to silver nitrate a milky white precipitate of Silver Chloride is formed. Potassium nitrate is also formed. When chlorine is added to potassium chloride nothing visible happens but the solutiuon become more acidic.
- potassium chloride - ammonium and calcium nitrate - ammonium and sodium phosphates - ammonium sulfate etc.
The reaction is: AgNO3 + KCl = AgCl + KNO3The precipitate is silver chloride.
These substances doesn't react.
s + p =
No
It is a "double replacement" reaction between silver nitrate and potassium chloride, to yield silver chloride and potassium nitrate.AgNO3+ KCl → AgCl + KNO3
KCl = Potassium Chloride KOH = Potassium Hydroxide KNO3 = Potassium Nitrate KMnO4 = Potassium Permanganate