It is not an oxide.It is a hydroxide.
zinc + nitric acid --> zinc nitrate + water and hydrogen I think...
Copper(II) Oxide: CuO reaction with Nitric Acid: CuO + 2 HNO3 => Cu(NO3)2 + H2O Copper(I) Oxide: Cu2O reaction with Ntric Acid: Cu2O + 2HNO3 => CuNO3 + H2O
+2 is the valency of nitrogen in compound HNO3(nitric acid)
H2O + 2NO2 -----> HNO3 + HNO2 a mixture of nitric and nitrous acid. The nitrous acid gets further oxidized by oxygen to nitric acid.
When nitrous oxide is dissolved in water, the major species present is N2O(aq), which exists as a solvated molecule in the water. Nitrous oxide can also react with water to produce nitric oxide (NO) and nitric acid (HNO3).
Nitrogen(II) oxide can be produced by oxidation of NO, dehydration of HNO3, thermal decomposition of nitrates etc.
Gallium oxide is dissolved in hot nitric acid.
The chemical reaction is:ZnO + 2 HNO3 = Zn(NO3)2 + H2Adding more HNO3 has no effect.
zinc + nitric acid --> zinc nitrate + water and hydrogen I think...
Copper(II) Oxide: CuO reaction with Nitric Acid: CuO + 2 HNO3 => Cu(NO3)2 + H2O Copper(I) Oxide: Cu2O reaction with Ntric Acid: Cu2O + 2HNO3 => CuNO3 + H2O
+2 is the valency of nitrogen in compound HNO3(nitric acid)
Nh3 + 2o2 --> hno3 + h2o
H2O + 2NO2 -----> HNO3 + HNO2 a mixture of nitric and nitrous acid. The nitrous acid gets further oxidized by oxygen to nitric acid.
When nitrous oxide is dissolved in water, the major species present is N2O(aq), which exists as a solvated molecule in the water. Nitrous oxide can also react with water to produce nitric oxide (NO) and nitric acid (HNO3).
Iron (III) oxide is insoluble in water and most common solvents. However, it can react with acids to form soluble iron salts.
The balanced equation for the reaction between nitric acid (HNO3) and calcium oxide (CaO) is: 2HNO3 + CaO → Ca(NO3)2 + H2O
Gold and platinum will no react with HNO3 due to their low reactivity. Aluminum also will not react with HNO3 despite its relatively high reactivity because it has a protective layer of aluminum oxide on it.