Yes all sodium (Na) compounds are water soluble.
NaNO3 at 10C = About 80g KNO3 at 60C = About 100g NaCl at 50C = About 38g
4.2 grams NaNO3/60 grams water * 100 = 7% by mass -------------------
water- soluble
acidic
Diphenylamine is only slightly soluble in water, but more soluble in polar organic solvents.
Sodium nitrate (NaNO3) is very soluble in water.
NaNO3 at 10C = About 80g KNO3 at 60C = About 100g NaCl at 50C = About 38g
Yes. AgNO3 + NaCl --> NaNO3 + AgCl AgCl will form a milky white precipitate, where as NaNO3 is soluble in water.
NaNO3 is highly soluble in room-temperature water.
You add water to NaNO3 or NaNo3 to water until you reach the desired concentration
The silver chloride, as a white precipitate is obtained:AgNO3 + NaCl = AgCl + NaNO3
Sodium phosphate is soluble in water. Normally, compounds of the phosphate ion are insoluble, the exceptions being salts of NH4+ and the alkali metal cations (the sodium ion is one).
Substances that are soluble have the ability to to dissolve. A common example of a soluble substance would be sugar(C12H22O11) and salt(NaCl), both are easily soluble in the universal solvent, water. Three other examples are Potassium Chloride (KCl), Potassium Iodide(KI), and Sodium Nitrate(NaNO3).
Yes, any cation that bond with NO3 are soluble and therefore can be aqueous.
Br2 and C6H14 are soluble in non-polar solvents such as CCl4.
A red colouration is obtained. This is a test for ketones
This is a precipitation reaction. Halides of silver are insoluble in water (except silver fluoride) whereas all nitrates are soluble in water. Sodium salts are soluble. Thus, silver iodide is the precipitate. Formula: AgNO3(aq) + NaI(aq) -> AgI(s) + NaNO3(aq)