Just as precipitation in weather means, something will come out and down. In this case, when something is added to a solution, some thing else will come out out the solution. You will see something drifting or falling to the bottom of the container.
precipitation. I think it's condensation. Precipitation (in chemistry) is the condensation of a liquid to a solid during a chemical reaction.
I've never heard the term "supernatured". I suspect you mean supernatant, which literally means "swimming above" and figuratively means the solution that's left over after a precipitation reaction.
The principle that governs precipitation reactions is the formation of an insoluble solid (precipitate) when two solutions are mixed and a solid is formed due to the reaction of the ions in the solutions. This occurs because the product of the reaction is not soluble in the solution.
This is a precipitation reaction.
precipitation reaction
It is the name given to the solids that are formed in a precipitation reaction. It comes from mixing two things or changing the temperature of a solute.
creation of solid in a solution
Precipitation has to do with weather, or in another sense, it has to do with chemistry.
The reaction between barium chloride (BaCl₂) and sodium sulfate (Na₂SO₄) is a double displacement (or precipitation) reaction. In this reaction, the barium ions (Ba²⁺) react with sulfate ions (SO₄²⁻) to form barium sulfate (BaSO₄), which is insoluble and precipitates out of the solution. The sodium ions (Na⁺) and chloride ions (Cl⁻) remain in solution. This type of reaction is commonly used to demonstrate precipitation in chemistry.
When two dissolved solids react to form a solid that doesn't dissolve, the reaction is called a precipitation reaction. In this process, the insoluble solid that forms is known as a precipitate. Precipitation reactions are commonly used in various applications, including analytical chemistry and water treatment.
Chloride precipitation reaction involves the formation of an insoluble chloride compound when a chloride salt is mixed with a metal ion in solution, leading to the precipitation of the compound. This reaction is often used in analytical chemistry to selectively separate and identify metal ions based on their different solubilities of chloride compounds. Examples include the precipitation of silver chloride from silver nitrate solution or lead chloride from lead nitrate solution.
A precipitation reaction contains two aqueous reactants, one aqueous product, and one solid product. A precipitation reaction will produce an insoluble product.