It does not it is extremely stable.
Barium carbonate will react with nitric acid, producing barium nitrate, carbon dioxide, and water.
Sodium hydrogen carbonate and nitric acid react to form sodium nitrate, carbon dioxide, and water.
Nitric Acid cannot react with Gold alone. The only solution that can dissolve Gold is Aqua Regia; a combination of Nitric Acid and Hydrochloric Acid.
No, it does not
Nitric is an acid. Ammonia is a base. SO they react when mixed
Carbon don't react with acids, except concentrated Nitric acid. Concentrated nitric acid reacts with carbon to produce Water, Carbon dioxide, and Nitrogen dioxide.
Barium carbonate will react with nitric acid, producing barium nitrate, carbon dioxide, and water.
Plutonium easily react with nitric acid.
Sodium hydrogen carbonate and nitric acid react to form sodium nitrate, carbon dioxide, and water.
Examples: hydrochloric acid, nitric acid, acetic acid, etc.
Nitric Acid cannot react with Gold alone. The only solution that can dissolve Gold is Aqua Regia; a combination of Nitric Acid and Hydrochloric Acid.
No, it does not
Nitric is an acid. Ammonia is a base. SO they react when mixed
Nitric acid is oxidizing acid. When it reacts with iron it forms a protective layer of iron oxide over it. So it does not react further.
GOLD
No
Platinum doesn't react with nitric acid.