No. It is an ionic compound.
leadnitrogenoxygen
The elements that make up a lead nitrate are lead nitrogen and oxygen
This question is misguided. Firstly, Lead forms only the nitrate. Secondly, the phrase 'compound element' is meaningless. A compound is composed of elements. Lead nitrate is a compound composed of the elements lead, nitrogen and oxygen.
Lead nitrate is a compound, as it is composed of lead, nitrogen, and oxygen atoms that are chemically bonded together in a specific ratio. It is not considered an element or a mixture because it is a pure substance with a fixed composition.
no silver is an element nitrogen is an element silver nitrate is a compound
You can separate lead nitrate from a lead nitrate solution by adding a soluble salt like sodium chloride, which will cause lead chloride to precipitate out as a solid. The lead chloride can then be filtered out from the solution, leaving you with the lead nitrate solution separated from the lead chloride.
The chemical formula of lead(II) nitrate is Pb(NO3)2; also exist the lead(IV) nitrate but not the lead(III) nitrate.
PbNO3 Lead (I) Nitrate Yes
Silver nitrate and lead nitrate do not react, so there would be no precipitate.
The products will be lead hydroxide and sodium nitrate
Lead and silver nitrate will react to produce silver and lead nitrate. Pb(s) + AgNO3(aq) --> Ag(s) + Pb(NO3)2(aq) We can know this by referring to an activity (also called reactivity) series for metals, which lists metals in a vertical list such that any metal will replace any metal below it on the list. Lead is above silver, therefore, the lead will replace the silver in the silver nitrate compound. For an activity series from Wikipedia, refer to the related link below.
Potassium nitrate is a compound. Its formula is KNO3.