Strontium nitrate and ammonium carbonate are both easily soluble in water.
yes
Silver nitrate is soluble in water but chloride and carbonate are insoluble.
It would yield 2KCl +SrCO3, Potassium Chloride will be soluble while the Strontium carbonate will be insoluble
There is NO precipitant formed in the following reaction:NH4NO3 + NaOH → NH3 + H2O + NaNO3Ammonia is liberated as a gas.Remember: All sodium and ammonium salts are soluble, as even all nitrates are soluble.
Most nitrate compounds are highly soluble in water, so adding strontium nitrate to water would create a large number of free ions in the water. These free ions could then act as charge carriers, making the water able to conduct current. Since adding strontium nitrate would make the water conductive, strontium nitrate is an electrolyte. Some other strontium salts, such as strontium sulfide, wouldn't dissolve significantly in water, so they wouldn't create the free ions necessary to conduct current.
yes
No. Ammonium nitrate is water soluble.
Yes it is soluble.
yes Ammonium carbonate is soluble in water.
no. but its soluble in water and semi soluble in alcohol
Yes.
All ammonium salts (containing NH4+ ions) are soluble.
No it is insoluble, though very soluble in water.
Silver nitrate is soluble in water but chloride and carbonate are insoluble.
no it's a white solid but it is soluble
It would yield 2KCl +SrCO3, Potassium Chloride will be soluble while the Strontium carbonate will be insoluble
If the silver nitrate and ammonium chloride are both in solution when mixed, the very sparingly soluble silver chloride precipitates as a solid, leaving ammonium nitrate in the solution.