Yes, barium and chloride do not form a precipitate and hyrogen and nitrate will form nitric acid. Yes, barium and chloride do not form a precipitate and hyrogen and nitrate will form nitric acid.
yes it does and it forms a white precipitate
Yes, barium nitrate is soluble in water.
No
no
barium nitrate + sulphuric acid gives barium sulphate equation is BaNo3 + SO4 - BaSO4
add barium chloride or barium nitrate to a solution containing sulphate ions SO4 2-. To the same solution add hydrochloric acid in excess. OBSERVATIONS, a white precipitate which is insoluble in excess acid confirms presence of SO42- IF IT DISSOLVES then it confirms SO32- ----------------------------------------- 1) Add barium nitrate solution under acidic conditions (use an equal volume of hydrochloric acid) to the unknown solution 2) A white precipitate of barium sulphate forms if sulphate ions are present
Barium carbonate will react with nitric acid, producing barium nitrate, carbon dioxide, and water.
Because barium sulfate is a precipitate; barium chloride is soluble in water.
no
barium nitrate + sulphuric acid gives barium sulphate equation is BaNo3 + SO4 - BaSO4
add barium chloride or barium nitrate to a solution containing sulphate ions SO4 2-. To the same solution add hydrochloric acid in excess. OBSERVATIONS, a white precipitate which is insoluble in excess acid confirms presence of SO42- IF IT DISSOLVES then it confirms SO32- ----------------------------------------- 1) Add barium nitrate solution under acidic conditions (use an equal volume of hydrochloric acid) to the unknown solution 2) A white precipitate of barium sulphate forms if sulphate ions are present
Barium carbonate will react with nitric acid, producing barium nitrate, carbon dioxide, and water.
BaCl2; Barium chloride.
Examples: sodium chloride, hydrochloric acid, potassium dichromate, uranyle nitrate, calcium nitrate, lithium chloride, citric acid, sugar, etc. In general terms, salts, acids and bases.
No
Because barium sulfate is a precipitate; barium chloride is soluble in water.
Yes, it will
Yes
hydrochloric acid
hydrochloric acid + barium carbonate -> barium chloride + carbon dioxide + water HCl (aq) + BaCO3 (s) -> BaCl (s) + CO2 (g) + H2O (l)