Both of these salts are soluble in water.
Combining sodium sulfate and barium nitrate would result in the formation of barium sulfate and sodium nitrate. Barium sulfate is a white precipitate that is insoluble in water, while sodium nitrate remains in solution.
The reaction between sodium phosphate and barium chlorate in water would be a double displacement reaction, forming insoluble barium phosphate and soluble sodium chlorate as products. The balanced chemical equation for the reaction is: 3Na3PO4 + 2Ba(ClO3)2 → Ba3(PO4)2 + 6NaClO3
When barium nitrate and sodium sulfate mix, they form barium sulfate and sodium nitrate. Barium sulfate is a white solid that precipitates out of the solution, while sodium nitrate remains dissolved. This reaction can be used in chemistry labs to demonstrate precipitation reactions.
The solubility of barium is somewhat mixed---it can be soluble with notoriously insoluble things like hydroxide, and it can be insoluble with other somewhat insoluble anions like sulfate. However, chromate is one anion that is almost always insoluble unless it is paired with an alkali metal. So mixing these two compounds will give you a BaCrO4 precipitate.
Yes.
Barium nitrate and sodium phosphate react to form insoluble barium phosphate and soluble sodium nitrate. This reaction can be represented by the chemical equation: Ba(NO3)2 + Na3PO4 -> Ba3(PO4)2 + 3NaNO3.
If the sodium sulfate and barium nitrate are both in solution in water, a precipitate of barium sulfate will be formed, because this salt is much less soluble in water than barium nitrate, sodium sulfate, or sodium nitrate.
Combining sodium sulfate and barium nitrate would result in the formation of barium sulfate and sodium nitrate. Barium sulfate is a white precipitate that is insoluble in water, while sodium nitrate remains in solution.
The reaction between sodium phosphate and barium chlorate in water would be a double displacement reaction, forming insoluble barium phosphate and soluble sodium chlorate as products. The balanced chemical equation for the reaction is: 3Na3PO4 + 2Ba(ClO3)2 → Ba3(PO4)2 + 6NaClO3
When sodium phosphate and iron nitrate react, they form iron phosphate and sodium nitrate. This is a double displacement reaction where the cations and anions in the reactants switch partners to form new compounds.
Salts: sodium chloride, barium nitrate, uranyl acetate, plutonium sulfate, ammonium phosphate etc.
When barium nitrate and sodium sulfate mix, they form barium sulfate and sodium nitrate. Barium sulfate is a white solid that precipitates out of the solution, while sodium nitrate remains dissolved. This reaction can be used in chemistry labs to demonstrate precipitation reactions.
Sodium nitrate (NaNO3) is more soluble in water compared to sodium chloride (NaCl). Sodium nitrate has a higher solubility due to the presence of more polar nitrate (NO3-) ions in the compound.
Adding a solution of Sodium Sulphate to aqueous Barium Nitrate will produce a white precipitate of Barium Sulphate with Sodium Nitrate remaining in solution.
In aqueous solution, barium nitrate and sodium hydroxide undergo a double replacement reaction, in which barium ions combine with hydroxide ions to form barium hydroxide and sodium ions combine with nitrate ions to form sodium nitrate. Barium hydroxide is insoluble in water, so it precipitates out of solution. Ba(NO3)2(aq) + 2NaOH(aq) --> Ba(OH)2(s) + 2NaNO3(aq)
The solubility of barium is somewhat mixed---it can be soluble with notoriously insoluble things like hydroxide, and it can be insoluble with other somewhat insoluble anions like sulfate. However, chromate is one anion that is almost always insoluble unless it is paired with an alkali metal. So mixing these two compounds will give you a BaCrO4 precipitate.
Yes.