The reaction is:
AgNO3 + NaCl = AgCl + NaNO3
AgCl is a withe precipitate used to gravimetrically determination of chlorine or silver.
To determine the mass of silver chloride produced, we need to know the balanced chemical equation for the reaction between silver nitrate (AgNO3) and sodium chloride (NaCl) that produces silver chloride (AgCl) as a precipitate. Once we have the balanced equation, we can use the stoichiometry of the reaction to determine the number of moles of AgCl produced, and then convert that to mass using the molar mass of AgCl.
Not recommended; silver nitrate is corrosive and dangerous.
Silver nitrate is easily soluble in water.
Silver nitrate
One silver-containing compound is silver nitrate, AgNO3.
to acidify it for chloride test. you would not use hydrochloric as it contains chloride and interferes with chloride test. It may also act as a catalyst for the chloride test too. as small amounts can act as a catalyst for ester formation in organic chemistry.
you can but it you do it will kill the plant...
Chemically they are both sodium chloride although some curing salts are a mixture of sodium nitrate and sodium chloride.
I suppose that the most suitable is the ammonium nitrate - NH4NO3.
Sodium is used in several forms to preserve food, such as sodium chloride and sodium nitrate.
Silver nitrate was used for the skin cauterisation; now is avoided.
Use estimation when an approximate answer is acceptable.