Silver chloride is 1/10 soluble than silver chromate in the cold 1/3 in hot water. That means silver will incline to precepetate as AgCl preferentially. More over if chromate will form it will convert to silver nitrate.
The chromate ion (CrO4-2) has yellow colour so all the chromate compounds including silver chromate is yellow in colour.
Due to insoluble Pb2+ ions
due to the solubility product constant(ksp)
Silver Chromate Ag=Silver CrO4= Chromate(a polyatomic ion)
Silver chromate is not soluble in water.
No, lead chromate is insoluble in water
the answer is no because aluminum is not soluble in water.
Silver chloride is 1/10 soluble than silver chromate in the cold 1/3 in hot water. That means silver will incline to precepetate as AgCl preferentially. More over if chromate will form it will convert to silver nitrate.
The chromate ion (CrO4-2) has yellow colour so all the chromate compounds including silver chromate is yellow in colour.
Due to insoluble Pb2+ ions
Silver Chromate Ag=Silver CrO4= Chromate(a polyatomic ion)
due to the solubility product constant(ksp)
It is not soluble in oils.
Silver(I) chromate = Ag2CrO4
yes7.19 g/100 ml (20 °C)57 g/100 mL (100 °C)
yes