Ammonium sulfate reacts with barium nitrate to form ammonium nitrate and barium sulfate.
(NH4)2SO4 + Ba(NO3)2 ==> 2NH4NO3 + BaSO4
It is a double replacement reaction.
that is the correct answer
Ba2+ + CO32- >> BaSO4
If the sodium sulfate and barium nitrate are both in solution in water, a precipitate of barium sulfate will be formed, because this salt is much less soluble in water than barium nitrate, sodium sulfate, or sodium nitrate.
(NH4)2SO4(aq) + BaCl2(aq) → 2NH4Cl(aq) + BaSO4(s). Barium sulfate is the precipitate.
Since both barium chloride and barium sulfate contain one mole of barium atoms pert mole of compound, the moles of barium sulfate will be the same, 0.100, when barium has the limiting concentration in the production of the sulfate.
Ammonium and acetate don't react. Only ... ... are precipitating to solid. (SO42-)aq + (Ba2+)aq --> (BaSO4)s
BaNO3 + MnSO4 --> MnNO3 + BaSO4 (Manganes(II) nitrate and barium sulfate) (double replacement reaction)
there will be a positive reaction
A white precipitate reaction
Ba2+ + CO32- >> BaSO4
(NH4)2SO4 + Ba(NO3)2 -> BaSO4 + 2NH4NO3
The spectator ions are Ag+ and (NO3)-.
If the sodium sulfate and barium nitrate are both in solution in water, a precipitate of barium sulfate will be formed, because this salt is much less soluble in water than barium nitrate, sodium sulfate, or sodium nitrate.
Salts: sodium chloride, barium nitrate, uranyl acetate, plutonium sulfate, ammonium phosphate etc.
NH4+ and NO3- don't react, Only SO42- and Ba2+ do so by forming precipitate: SO42- + Ba2+ --> (BaSO4)s
(NH4)2SO4(aq) + BaCl2(aq) → 2NH4Cl(aq) + BaSO4(s). Barium sulfate is the precipitate.
The spectator ions are Ag+ and (NO3)-.
Barium Sulphate