No, they will not because their anions are same i.e. Nitrate
sort of...
yes
monosodium glutamate, lead diacetate, potassium bitartrate, potassium chloride, magnesium sulfate, sodium chloride, uranyl nitrate, potassium phosphate, etc.
The mass of lead(II) nitrate required to react with 370 g NaOH is 1 531,9 g.
Zinc is more reactive than Lead nitrate (See Displacement Series). Therefore, Zinc will displace lead in lead nitrate: Zn + Pb(NO3)2 -> Zn(NO3)2 + Pb
cobalt
through a double displacement reaction. 2Ca + Pb(NO3)4 = Pb + 2Ca(NO3)2
The salt solutions that lead react with are lead nitrate solution and sodium chloride. This reaction produces solid lead chloride, and leave soluble sodium nitrate in the solution.
The reaction is: 2 NaCl + Pb(NO3)2 = 2 NaNO3 + PbCl2 The lead (II) chloride is a precipitate insoluble in water.
Anything with lead ions and anything with chloride ions. So, for example, lead nitrate and sodium chloride. Getting lead into solution is actually the tricky part here; most lead compounds are not particularly soluble.
Silver nitrate and lead nitrate do not react, so there would be no precipitate.
NO. Platinum will not react with lead(II) nitrate because platinum is BELOW lead in the activity series.
These compounds doesn't react.
lead II acetate and barium chloride equation
NO. Platinum will not react with lead(II) nitrate because platinum is BELOW lead in the activity series.
It produces Potassium nitrate and Lead iodide
gold will not react with lead nitrate because gold is the least reactive metal- it hardly reacts with anything
no
The lead nitrate and sodium sulfate precipitate together and becomes lead sulfate and sodium nitrate. lead nitrate+ sodium sulfate --> lead sulfate + sodium nitrate