light blue color
When casein is added to HCl, it becomes a precipitate. It does this because of a process called acid coagulation.
Add AgNO3 solution. If a white precipitate (AgCl), it's HCl. If no precipitate, HNO3.
HNO3 which forms white precipitate..
Nope. All ions would stay in solution.
light blue color
When casein is added to HCl, it becomes a precipitate. It does this because of a process called acid coagulation.
Add AgNO3 solution. If a white precipitate (AgCl), it's HCl. If no precipitate, HNO3.
HNO3 which forms white precipitate..
The constant solubility product is modified.
Nope. All ions would stay in solution.
Molecular equation = HCl(aq) + Ag (aq) =======> AgCl (s)
This equation is: AgNO3 + HCl--------- AgCl + HNO3 AgCl is a white precipitate.
I'm not sure abut the K2CrO4, but adding concentrated HCl to saturated NH4Cl you can form usually a white precipitate (with clearish suspension).
Aluminum chloride (AlCl3) can be brought out of solution, that is precipitated into crystalline form. This process requires hydrochloric acid (HCl).
When NaHCO3 plus HCL reacted they forum two different substance that is H4CO3+NaCl, That is the balanced formula.
My guess is Fe2+ as FeSCN3+ is light red at least. Not sure, but I guess you'd use the HCL for oxidizing the iron to Fe3+