No reaction
The silver nitrate solution (AgNO3) provides the silver in silver chloride.
Silver nitrate is soluble in water but chloride and carbonate are insoluble.
Silver chloride - AgClAg (107.89 grams) + Cl (35.45 grams) = 143.34 grams
silver chloride
9.11 g
Silver and chlorine
Silver and Chlorine
Silver chloride is easily synthesized by combining aqueous solutions of silver nitrate and sodium chloride.
Silver(+1 charged) and Chlorine(-1 charge)
Ag + Cl (silver and chlorine) i'd guess
Silver chloride is a chemical compound, not an element, as it is comprised of multiple chemical elements, namely Silver and Chlorine.
The color become grey because silver chloride (AgCl) is slowly decomposed to silver and chlorine.
Silver and chlorine form AgCl.
Ag+ is Silver, and Cl- is chlorine.When silver and chlorine are combined, the amounts do not need to be changed since the charges become neutral, so all that is changed is the -ine to an -ide.The final result is Silver Chloride. AgCl - Silver chloride
Silver almost always has an oxidation state of 1+ and Chlorine an oxidation state of 1-. Therefore, silver chloride has a simple formula of AgCl.
When clhlorine is added to silver nitrate a milky white precipitate of Silver Chloride is formed. Potassium nitrate is also formed. When chlorine is added to potassium chloride nothing visible happens but the solutiuon become more acidic.
When the light hits silver chloride it loses electrons and becomes metal and chlorine, so the result would be low.