No, it is not soluble in water
When H2O (water) reacts with AgI (silver iodide), it forms a mixture known as a silver iodide suspension. Silver iodide is poorly soluble in water, so it will not dissolve completely but rather will form a suspension with water molecules surrounding the silver iodide particles.
Copper iodide is sparingly soluble in water, meaning it dissolves only to a small extent. It is more soluble in concentrated aqueous ammonia and potassium iodide solutions.
Lead iodide (PbI2) is a compound consisting of lead and iodine, whereas silver chloride (AgCl) is a compound made up of silver and chlorine. Lead iodide is yellow in color and is more soluble in water compared to silver chloride, which is white in color and has low solubility in water. Lead iodide has different chemical and physical properties compared to silver chloride, due to the different elements it contains.
Ethyl iodide is miscible with ethanol.
Silver iodide is written as AgI, where Ag represents silver and I represents iodide.
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)
Silver iodide is not soluble in ammonia solution.
Yes, barium iodide is soluble in water. It will dissolve and dissociate into barium ions (Ba2+) and iodide ions (I-) in solution.
When H2O (water) reacts with AgI (silver iodide), it forms a mixture known as a silver iodide suspension. Silver iodide is poorly soluble in water, so it will not dissolve completely but rather will form a suspension with water molecules surrounding the silver iodide particles.
Silver(I) iodide
Copper iodide is sparingly soluble in water, meaning it dissolves only to a small extent. It is more soluble in concentrated aqueous ammonia and potassium iodide solutions.
Lead iodide (PbI2) is a compound consisting of lead and iodine, whereas silver chloride (AgCl) is a compound made up of silver and chlorine. Lead iodide is yellow in color and is more soluble in water compared to silver chloride, which is white in color and has low solubility in water. Lead iodide has different chemical and physical properties compared to silver chloride, due to the different elements it contains.
It is false; sodium iodide is more soluble than sodium chloride in water.
Yes, to an extent of about one-fifth of the (high) solubility of lithium iodide in water.
Ethyl iodide is miscible with ethanol.
Silver iodide is written as AgI, where Ag represents silver and I represents iodide.
Yes, Dichloromethand is a non-polar organic solvent. Stannic Iodide, being tetrahedral with four identical substituents, has an overall polarity of zero. Knowing that "like dissolves like", Stannic Iodide IS soluble in DCM.