no
Silver nitrate plus potassium iodide yields silver iodide plus potassium nitrate.
NH4NO3(aq) + KCL(aq) --> KNO3(s) + NH4CL(aq) This is a type of metathesis reaction called a double displacement reaction. Aqueous ammonium nitrate and aqueous potassium chloride yields solid potassium nitrate and aqueous ammonium chloride. Essentially the cations and anions of the reactants switch, and potassium nitrate (one of the products) precipitates out of the solution as a solid. The ammonium chloride (the other product formed) remains dissociated as ions in the solution. The above reaction is balanced.
4KClO3= 3KClO4+KCl
2KI+Pb(NO(3))(2) yields 2KNO(3)+PbI(2). You basically get potassium nitrate and lead (II) iodide when you react potassium iodide and lead nitrate dissolved in solution.
HNO3 + KCl = KNO3 + HCl
AgNO3 + Al2(SO4)3 = Ag2SO4 + Al(NO3)3
The equation (not "formula") is 2 AgNO3 + FeCl2 -> 2 AgCl + Fe(NO3)2 for iron (II) chloride and 3 AgNO3 + FeCl3 -> 3 AgCl + Fe(NO3)3 for iron (III) chloride.
Silver oxide --> silver and (+) oxygenAg2O --> Ag2 + O2BALANCED =2Ag2O --> 2Ag2 + O2
Decomposition by heat: (KClO3)s --> (KCl)s + (O2)g
"Potassium hydroxide hydrogen" is meaningless.
Sulfuric acid plus copper (II) nitrate yields nitric acid plus copper (II) sulfate. Sulfuric acid plus copper (I) nitrate yields nitrous acid plus copper (I) sulfate.
sodium plus chlorine yields sodium chloride