The chemical reaction is:
CaCl2 + 2 AgNO3 = 2 AgCl(s) + Ca(NO3)2
The precipitate is silver chloride.
The reaction is:LNaCl + AgNO3 = AgCl + NaNO3The white precipitate is silver chloride.
You can make potassium chloride precipitate by adding silver nitrate (AgNO3). The chemical equation being AgNO3(aq)+ KCl(aq) = KNO3(aq) + AgCl(s) You know that silver nitrate will form a precipitate as you can see this on a solubility chart.
The mass of silver nitrate is 30,6 g.
Nothing - barium chloride is soluble. You can however precipitate either the barium (e.g. with sodium sulphate, giving barium sulpate, or the chloride, e.g. with silver nitrate giving silver chloride precipitate.
9.11 g
Dissolve them in water and add some sodium chloride. The silver salt will form a precipitate (as silver chloride), the calcium salt will not.
an example of a precipitate is: silver nitrate + sodium chloride = silver chloride and sodium nitrate the precipitate is the silver chloride it forms a white powder
Silver Chloride (AgCl) is the precipitate in this reaction.
silver chloride should precipitate out.
A precipitate is a solid which 'falls down' from the solution. Thus silver chloride is the precipitate.
When silver nitrate reacts with hydrochloride a white precipitate of Silver Chloride is formed.
Formation of a precipitate is evidence of a chemical reaction.
Because the product silver chloride is a white precipitate.
The reaction is:LNaCl + AgNO3 = AgCl + NaNO3The white precipitate is silver chloride.
silver nitrate (AgNO3)
Silver chloride will deposit as a white precipitate.
In this reaction white precipitates of Silver chloride are formed.