No. Phosphates are substances that contain groups made of phosphorus and oxygen, either as an ion (often PO43-) or a covalently bound group. Ammonia is NH3, a simple compound of nitrogen and hydrogen.
You can get DAP (Di-Ammonium Phosphate) or Map (Mono-Ammonium phosphate), depending on how they were reacted.
3hno3 + h3po4 ->(nh4)3po4
Ba2CH3CO2PO4 Barium + ammonia + carbon dioxide + phosphate
ammonia and phosphoric acid combines to for mono-ammonium phosphate (MAP) and if MAP is further reacted with ammonia then it gives di-ammonium phosphate (DAP) both reactions are exothermic in nature. reaction is as follows NH3 + H3PO4 ------> (NH4)H2PO4 (MAP) NH3 + NH4H2PO4 --------> (NH4)2HPO4 (DAP)
Water, oxygen, carbon dioxide, sodium chloride, ammonia, carbon monoxide, calcium phosphate etc
nun u retardd
There are too many to list. A few are water, nitrate compounds, ammonia compounds, phosphate compounds, sulfur compounds, silica, etc.
Straight fertilizer is a fertilizer that contribute nutrient to the crops. In the fertilizer there is urea, rock phosphate, ammonia, sulfate and muriate of potash. It can be put straight on the plates to help them grow faster.
It depends on what compound. If you're refering to ammonium dihydrogen phosphate (formed from ammonia and phosphoric acid), the answer would be 14.66g. Here's why: Ammonia has a molar mass of 17.031g (1*17.007 + 3*1.008). NH4H2PO4 has a molar mass of 115.025. NH3, therefore, only makes up 14.806 % of the compound. Multiply this number (.14806) by 99 g, and you get your answer, 14.66g.
Urine was used for the ammonia content in the dye-ing industry. However there are more effecient and ways of producing ammonia these days. There would be very little call for it now. Fresh Human urine was used in the dye process in the middle ages. But since there are ways to replicate the chemicals like ammonia, urea and phosphate in modern times it's no longer required for the process.
The compound with formula Na3PO4 is named "sodium phosphate", "trisodium phosphate", "sodium ortho-phosphate", or "trisodium ortho-phosphate".
Nitric acidANsw2. Well, Superphosphate fertilizer is made by reacting rock phosphate with sulphuric acid.But both nitrates and ammonia are used by plants as fertilizers as a source of nitrogen.