Yes, Zinc nitrate hexahydrate is soluble in 2-propanol. It is actually soluble in most of the polar solvent.
The chemical formula of zinc nitrate hexahydrate is Zn(NO3)2·6H2O.
Zinc nitrate is very soluble in water.
no it does not because it forms a production of gas
Probably nothing. As both the nitrates and the chlorides of zinc and sodium are water-soluble, there is nothing to drive the reaction. You would wind up with an aqueous solution containing all 4 ions.
When zinc nitrate solution is added to lead nitrate solution you willÊapparently observe a black solid being formed. All of the research yielded facts from adding solid metal to either zinc or lead.
For clarity, zinc (II) nitrate would be the preferred name. However, if you just said "zinc nitrate", most chemists would guess you meant that formula; the +1 oxidation state is technically possible for zinc, but zinc (I) compounds are relatively rare.
Yes, zinc will react with silver nitrate solution. This reaction occurs because zinc is more reactive than silver, so zinc displaces silver from the silver nitrate solution to form zinc nitrate and silver metal.
Zinc nitrate purity is defined in catalogs.
zinc nitrate + sodium hydroxide yields sodium nitrate and zinc hydroxide( white precipitate)
The chemical formula for zinc nitrate is Zn(NO3)2.
Yes, zinc and tin nitrate would react with one another. When zinc is added to tin nitrate solution, a displacement reaction would occur, with the zinc displacing the tin from the nitrate compound to form zinc nitrate and tin metal.
Yes, zinc nitrate is a salt. It is an inorganic compound made up of positively charged zinc ions and negatively charged nitrate ions held together by ionic bonds.