No, because all sodium AND potassium salts are soluble, independent of being a nitrate or phosphate salt of either.
Ammonium sulphate and potassium nitrate do not react. All that will happen is that the solution will contain separate ammonium, sulphate, potassium, and nitrate ions dissolved in an aqueous (water) solution.
A precipitate of Lead iodide and Potassium nitrate are formed
its radioactive substance...
Ammonium hydroxide dissolves anything that is less strong than itself. The white precipitate of zinc hydroxide is not the whole component. Therefore, it is not as strong.
Lead iodide.
No.If you add ammonium chloride solution to potassium chloride solution all that happens is a solution with all the ions in it - ammonium ions, potassium ions, chloride ions and hydroxide ions.
Ammonium sulphate and potassium nitrate do not react. All that will happen is that the solution will contain separate ammonium, sulphate, potassium, and nitrate ions dissolved in an aqueous (water) solution.
A precipitate of Lead iodide and Potassium nitrate are formed
its radioactive substance...
Reddish precipitate of Mercuric iodide and clear solution of Potassium chloride is produced
A reaction doesn't occur.
Ammonium hydroxide dissolves anything that is less strong than itself. The white precipitate of zinc hydroxide is not the whole component. Therefore, it is not as strong.
Lead iodide.
A yellow precipitate of silver iodide (AgI).
just a clorine hydroxyde :))
Adding Ammonium Carbonate should give a White precipitate
Silver phosphate, Ag3PO4 precipitated in potassium nitrate solution (K+ and NO3-)