Want this question answered?
Silver Chloride (AgCl) is the precipitate in this reaction.
No. Iron is a more reactive metal than silver, so the iron will replace the silver in the silver nitrate solution, forming an iron nitrate solution and solid silver. Eventually, the iron container will be gone, its atoms having gone into the iron nitrate solution.
Silver chloride would form a precipitate. FeCl3(aq) + 3AgNO3(aq) --> Fe(NO3)3(aq) + 3AgCl(s) This is an example of a double replacement (displacement) reaction.
Iron (II) nitrate and elemental copper.
Iron nitrate and metallic copper.
You get Iron (III) Hydroxide and Sodium Nitrate. It is a double displacement chemical reaction...
as silver nitrate reacts with iron(AgNO3+Fe gives FeNO3+Ag)(decomposition reaction).
Silver Chloride (AgCl) is the precipitate in this reaction.
No, there would be no reaction present. This is because the particles are more reactive in the zinc then they are in the iron, thus creating no displacement reaction to occur between the metals.
No. Iron is a more reactive metal than silver, so the iron will replace the silver in the silver nitrate solution, forming an iron nitrate solution and solid silver. Eventually, the iron container will be gone, its atoms having gone into the iron nitrate solution.
Silver is disolved in the acid as Silver Nitrate. Silver + Nitric Acid -> Silver Nitrate + Hydrogen
Barium nitrate + Iron = [No reaction] Ba(NO3)2 + Fe = [No reaction]
iron nitric + silver
Silver chloride would form a precipitate. FeCl3(aq) + 3AgNO3(aq) --> Fe(NO3)3(aq) + 3AgCl(s) This is an example of a double replacement (displacement) reaction.
Silver is slightly more reactive than gold, although they are both very unreactive. Assuming that the gold nitrate exists, because it would be very rare, silver would react with it and displace it. The products formed will be silver nitrate and gold.
In certain reaction conditions, yes. Copper is more reactive than silver, so it should react with the nitrate molecule to form copper nitrate while precipitating the silver. *Are you thinking about separating silver from photographic fixer? Commonly a less expensive metal is used like iron (steel wool) to extract much of the silver.
Iron (II) nitrate and elemental copper.