Technically, yes. Potassium nitrate is a potassium atom attached to the nitrate ion.
no reaction occurs .. they just mix together.
Just potassium nitrate in water. Aqueous stands for anything with water, so if you take dry potassium nitrate and add some water to it until it dissolves, you have made an aqueous solution of potassium nitrate.
The chemical formula for potassium nitrate is KNO3.
The chemical formula KNO3 is for potassium nitrate.
Potassium nitrate is a strong electrolyte.
Potassium nitrate is too stable and so is silver for these two species to react. There is thus no balanced equation.
Silver nitrate plus potassium iodide yields silver iodide plus potassium nitrate.
Potassium nitrate is a compound. Its formula is KNO3.
KNO3 is the chemical formula of potassium nitrate.
no reaction occurs .. they just mix together.
Potassium nitrate = KNO3
potassium nitrite
Just potassium nitrate in water. Aqueous stands for anything with water, so if you take dry potassium nitrate and add some water to it until it dissolves, you have made an aqueous solution of potassium nitrate.
NaNO + Kcl =Nacl + KNO3 Further answer But the formula for sodium nitrate is NaNO3, not NaNO.
Potassium nitrate is composed of about 38.7% potassium.
Potassium nitrate is KNO3. There is one potassium per one nitrate. One mole of potassium nitrate contains one mole of nitrate.
Potassium nitrate is white.