Silver nitrate is the chemical name for the molecular compound having formula AgNO3. It is composed of silver (Ag) and a nitrate group (NO3). The reaction for its disassociation into water (H2O) is:AgNO3(s) + H20(l) <--> Ag+ (aq) + NO3-(aq) + H2O(l)
Hold on wait are you doing this for science homework too.
yeah
Silver Nitrate is the solute. Water is highly likely to be the solvent and the solution is silver nitrate solution.
Acetone, ammonia, ether and glycerone
AgNO3(s)+22.8 kJ/mol=AgNO3(aq)
AgNO3 --> Ag+aq + NO3-aq
Sodium - Na. When silver nitrate is mixed with Sodium Hydroxide, Sodium Iodide, Sodium Phosphate a precipitate forms.
Should be a white precipitate. Indicative of the presence of either Na or Mg. Wrong again people. Silver Nitrate is used to test for the presence of chloride ions. Such as those in your salt a.k.a sodium chloride and yes adding silver nitrate to your salt solution will create a white precipitate.
Add silver nitrate solution to a solution of bromide ions. A pale yellow precipitate of silver bromide formed indicates the presence of bromide ions.
The most common one is a solution of silver nitrate, which forms a white precipitate of silver chloride when added to a solution containing more than a minute concentration of chloride ions.
I presume you mean silver nitrate. A flame test detects only the metal ion in a compound. There isn't one for silver.
Sodium - Na. When silver nitrate is mixed with Sodium Hydroxide, Sodium Iodide, Sodium Phosphate a precipitate forms.
Should be a white precipitate. Indicative of the presence of either Na or Mg. Wrong again people. Silver Nitrate is used to test for the presence of chloride ions. Such as those in your salt a.k.a sodium chloride and yes adding silver nitrate to your salt solution will create a white precipitate.
Add silver nitrate solution to a solution of bromide ions. A pale yellow precipitate of silver bromide formed indicates the presence of bromide ions.
If you have the solid of whatever your testing and you burn it (flame test) it will burn with an orange flame if sodium is present. To establish whether it is sodium CHLORIDE, ad a solution of what your testing to silver nitrate and it should form a white precipitate if it's sodium chloride.
The most common one is a solution of silver nitrate, which forms a white precipitate of silver chloride when added to a solution containing more than a minute concentration of chloride ions.
I presume you mean silver nitrate. A flame test detects only the metal ion in a compound. There isn't one for silver.
When Sodium chloride is added to Silver nitrate; Both of these substances were originally colourless, however when merged a reaction occurred producing a white cloudy product (translucent). The chemical equation for this is; silver nitrate + sodium chloride --> silver chloride + sodium nitrate AgNO3(aq) + NaCl (aq) --> AgCl (s) + NaNO3 (aq)
Can't say, since "o" is not an element. However: Ag3N is Silver Nitride AgNO2 - Silver Nitrite AgNO3 - Silver Nitrate
Sodium bromide (NaBr) and Silver nitrate is AgNO3 When mixed in aqueous solution pale yellow(cream) coloured silver bromide will precipitate down . NaBr(aq) + AgNO3(aq) = AgBr(s) + NaNO3(aq) NB THis is the classic test for halogens. AgF remains in solution AgCl white ppt AgBr pale yellow ppt AgI yellow ppt.
Lead iodide (Pb2I) precipitates as a yellow solid, leaving a solution of potassium and nitrate ions.
titrate with mercuric nitrate solution
When testing silver nitrate, a whitish color will yield positive results. If the test is negative, the color will turn clear and it will remain transparent.