It does not react with pure water.
Silver does not react with water at room temperature or even at high temperatures. However, in the presence of oxygen and certain impurities, such as sulfur compounds, silver can tarnish and form a blackish silver sulfide layer on its surface.
Yes, silver does react with water, but the reaction is slow. Silver reacts with water to form silver oxide and hydrogen gas. This reaction is not as vigorous as with other metals like sodium or potassium.
Silver generally does not react with oxygen or water. However, it can react with sulfur compounds in the air to form tarnish. Silver can also react with certain acids and salts to form silver compounds.
Silver does not react with oxygen or water, which is why it doesn't tarnish easily. However, it can react with sulfur compounds in the air to form silver sulfide, which appears as a black tarnish on the surface of silver objects.
When silver is added to water, it does not react with the water. Silver is a noble metal and is relatively unreactive with water at room temperature.
Silver does not react with water at room temperature or even at high temperatures. However, in the presence of oxygen and certain impurities, such as sulfur compounds, silver can tarnish and form a blackish silver sulfide layer on its surface.
There should be Silver nitrate dissolved in the water, only then it can react
Yes, silver does react with water, but the reaction is slow. Silver reacts with water to form silver oxide and hydrogen gas. This reaction is not as vigorous as with other metals like sodium or potassium.
Silver generally does not react with oxygen or water. However, it can react with sulfur compounds in the air to form tarnish. Silver can also react with certain acids and salts to form silver compounds.
Silver does not react with oxygen or water, which is why it doesn't tarnish easily. However, it can react with sulfur compounds in the air to form silver sulfide, which appears as a black tarnish on the surface of silver objects.
When silver is added to water, it does not react with the water. Silver is a noble metal and is relatively unreactive with water at room temperature.
No. However, silver nitrate is photosensitive when moist, and reacts with light, so it might appear to react with water.
Silver does not react with oxygen or water at room temperature. However, over time, silver can tarnish due to reactions with sulfur compounds present in the air, forming a layer of silver sulfide on its surface.
Silver does not react with oxygen or water, making it resistant to tarnishing. It also does not react with most acids, except for nitric acid. Additionally, silver is relatively unreactive with other metals such as gold and platinum.
Silver nitrate does not react with water, it dissolves in it.
The bronze and silver stars will react with water, eventually. Since I think you mean "metals", how about sodium and potassium?
When silver chloride is added to water, it undergoes a reaction where it partially dissociates into silver ions and chloride ions. This reaction is reversible, as some of the ions recombine to form silver chloride again. The solubility of silver chloride in water is quite low, so only a small amount dissolves to form a cloudy solution.