Wrong ! ! ! ! !
Silver + Nitric Acid -----> Silver Nitrate + Water + Nitrogen Dioxide
Ag + 2 HNO3 -----> AgNO3 + H2O + NO2
By dissolving the silver nitrate in water, then stirring finely divided copper into the water. The copper will displace silver from the silver nitrate as a solid and form copper nitrate in the solution.
copper will replace silver in silver nitratesolution will precipitate silver and oxidize copper turning to copper nitrate
No, we cannot stir silver nitrate solution with a copper spoon because , copper is more reactive than silver. Thus,it would displace silver from the silver nitrate solution forming copper nitrate....
As copper is more reactive than silver copper will displace silver and will become copper nitrate and silver is left by its own from the reaction
Silver nitrate does not precipitate in this case; elemental silver does. In this reaction, silver nitrate reacts with copper to form elemental silver and copper II nitrate. The silver, which is a metal, is insoluble in water.
No, copper replaces silver because it is more reactive than silver, and therefore more stable in a compound.
the silver is displaced out of the compound because the copper is more reactive. It becomes copper nitrate.
A displacement reaction, in which the copper dissolves to form copper nitrate and replaces silver ions in the original silver nitrate, reducing the silver ions to metallic silver.
431.5 grams
Silver nitrate and copper will undergo a double displacement reaction to produce copper (II) nitrate and silver. 2AgNO3 + Cu --> Cu(NO3)2 + 2Ag
If the copper nitrate formed is copper (I) nitrate, the equation balances with one atom of each metal and one formula weight of each nitrate. If the copper nitrate formed is copper (II) nitrate, the balanced equation is: 2 AgNO3 + Cu -> 2 Ag + Cu(NO3)2.
Suspend a copper wire in a solution of silver nitrate. Over the course of a few hours the silver nitrate will convert to copper II nitrate, turning the solution blue. Elemental silver will precipitate.