Yes! Some stainless steel including some labeled "surgical" can contain lead especially if it is from China. My wife is a jeweler and has found some earring hooks she'd bought from a craft store to have a warning label on them stating the presence of lead. So beware!
No, It is made up of the following mixture: 18/8 stainless steel is 18% chromium and 8% nickel while 18/10 has 10% nickel
No reaction between stainless steel and lead.
None, stainless steel is composed of iron, carbon, chromium, and other alloying elements depending on the exact properties desired; but no lead.
2Zn+Pb(No3)2-2znNO3+Pb
Yes, lead reacts with oxygen and produces lead oxide.
Pb , derived from Plumbum.
Should be, assuming ideal reaction....... Pb + H2SO4 --> PbSO4 + H2 Products are lead sulfate and hydrogen gas.
Copper nitrate (Cu(NO3)2) will not react with lead nitrate (Pb(NO3)2), or if they do, no observable change will be noticed, given that both are soluble nitrate salts, i.e. Pb2+(aq) + NO32-(aq) > Pb(NO3)2 (This will also work for copper)
2Zn+Pb(No3)2-2znNO3+Pb
No because Cu is below Pb in the electrochemical series
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
The reaction is:Mg + PbO = MgO + Pb
Yes, lead reacts with oxygen and produces lead oxide.
Pb , derived from Plumbum.
Should be, assuming ideal reaction....... Pb + H2SO4 --> PbSO4 + H2 Products are lead sulfate and hydrogen gas.
The chemical name is lead. The symbol for the element lead is Pb, for plumbum, which comes from Latin for lead.
Symbol: Pb make sure you so capital P and lower case b
None. A reaction of ammonia does not produce any lead!
Copper nitrate (Cu(NO3)2) will not react with lead nitrate (Pb(NO3)2), or if they do, no observable change will be noticed, given that both are soluble nitrate salts, i.e. Pb2+(aq) + NO32-(aq) > Pb(NO3)2 (This will also work for copper)
Pb comes from the Latin word plumbum, and it's the chemical symbol for lead.