Nitric acid lead to nitrates.
Lead nitrate is not used in preparing nitric acid because it is not a source of nitric acid; it is a salt of lead. Nitric acid is typically produced by the oxidation of ammonia using a catalyst, or by the reaction of nitrogen dioxide with water. Lead nitrate is toxic and can be hazardous to handle, so it is not used in the production of nitric acid.
To dissolve lead oxide, you can use dilute nitric acid. Add the nitric acid to the lead oxide and heat the mixture gently until the lead oxide dissolves. Be sure to handle nitric acid with care as it is a corrosive substance.
When lead oxide is mixed with nitric acid, it will undergo a reaction to form lead nitrate and water. This reaction is a type of acid-base reaction where the oxide reacts with the acid to form the salt (nitrate) and water as a byproduct.
Lead nitrate is obtained.
Lead nitrate + Sulphuric acid ----> Lead sulphate + Nitric acidPb(NO3)2 + H2SO4 ----> PbSO4 + 2 HNO3Warning : Lead sulfate and Nitric acid are toxic. Nitric acid is very reactive and may produce fumes of Nitric oxide when exposed to air.
The lead carbonate is dissolved in nitric acid and carbon dioxide is released.
Carbonated water can dissolve lead to some degree. - - - - - Nitric and acetic acids will dissolve lead. I think hydrofluoric acid will also dissolve it, but HF will dissolve a lot of things nothing else will.
its a gas
Nitiric acid
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No, it does not
When nitric acid is added to lead (II) carbonate, a double displacement reaction occurs. Lead (II) nitrate and carbonic acid are formed. However, carbonic acid is unstable and decomposes into carbon dioxide and water, leaving behind lead (II) nitrate as the final product.