think so by electrolytic refining
Mercury (as a metal) is soluble in concentrated nitric acid.
Mercury (as a metal) is soluble in concentrated nitric acid.
Mercury is not attacked by dilute hydrochloric or sulfuric acid. It reacts with hot nitric acid to form mercuric nitrate, Hg(No 3 )
Mercury could be reacted with Nitric acid to form Mercurous nitrate. Since hydrogen is less reactive than mercury, therefore mercury would not replace hydrogen from nitric acid but the nitrate ion could oxidize mercury ion and form mercurous chloride .
When mercury is added to nitric acid and heated, it will react to form mercury(II) nitrate along with nitric oxide gas and water. The reaction is exothermic and can be violent if not done carefully as it releases toxic nitrogen dioxide fumes.
Millon's reagent is a solution of mercury nitrate in nitric acid. It usually consists of 10 g of mercury nitrate dissolved in 100 mL of nitric acid, resulting in a red-colored reagent that is used to test for the presence of aromatic compounds containing a phenolic hydroxy group.
Yes, mercury reacts with strong acids such as hydrochloric acid and nitric acid to form mercury salts. These reactions release toxic mercury vapors, so caution should be exercised when handling mercury in the presence of acids.
HNO3 is Nitric Acid Compare with HNO2 ; Nitrous Acid. Note the difference in the formulas and the names. Accounted for by the different oxidation states of nitrogen .
No, it does not
Alcohol, mercury, gasoline, sulfuric acid, paint and VERY cold oxygen.
nitric acid is heterogeneous.
The IUPAC name for nitric acid is "nitric acid." But its Periodic name is HNO3