No, they do not
There should be Silver nitrate dissolved in the water, only then it can react
Silver iodide (AgI), a precipitate insoluble in water, don't react with potassium nitrate.
In a water, potassium iodide, What_happens_when_you_react_potassium_iodide_with_hydrochloric_acidsolution, heat is absorbed and an endothermic reaction occurs. No physical changes.
no
It produces Potassium nitrate and Lead iodide
Yes, it can, by displacing the Iodide
NO, they are different.Iodide is only one ion (I-) and potassium iodide (KI) is the salty product when you react potassium (K) and iodine (I2)
no
Bromine and Potassium iodide react to form Potassium bromide and Iodine.
Potassium iodide is ionic.
A yellow Lead(II) iodide precipitate
The only known and possible reaction is the following redox (reduction-oxidation) reaction between I3- (Iodine-Iodide complex) and S2O32- (thiosulfate)I3- + 2 S2O32- --> 3 I- + S4O62-ox. + red.So the reaction between potassium iodide (KI) and potassium thiosulfate (K2S2O3) is NOT possible because they both are reductors (electron donors).Iodine-Iodide complex is essentially Iodine is an oxidator, bound to a non-reacting I- ion (Iodide)