Zinc nitrate. Zn(NO3)2 *6H2O MW 297.47 density = 2.065 g/ml Melting point 36.4º C
sodium hydroxide and nitric acid is sodium nitrate and water
The nitric acid has the chemical formula HNO3. The anion (NO3)- is called nitrate and nitric acid can form salts called nitrates.
Ammonium nitrate (NH4NO3)
zinc chloride, water, and carbon dioxide
In this reaction, zinc nitrate is formed.
They make zinc sulfate.
This salt is sodium nitrate - NaNO3.
If you simply dump reactants together without careful measurements then you will have something left over. Say you want to make sodium nitrate by reacting sodium hydroxide with nitric acid. The two chemicals react in a 1:1 ration, meaning that one mole of sodium hydroxide reacts with one mole of nitric acid; no more, no less. If you simply dump a vat of nitric acid into a vat of sodium hydroxide you don't know how much of each substance you are mixing and chances are you will have more of one than the other. If there is more nitric acid than sodium hydroxide, then there will by nitric acid left over. You get a similar problem if you end up adding to much sodium hydroxide. The end result is that the product you want is contaminated by an excess of one reactant and you have wasted chemicals. If you titrate you will be able to mix together your reactants in exactly the right amounts (within a small margin of error) so that the end product is as pure as you can make it and you waste as little of your reactants as you can.
Sodium Hydroxide and Sulphuric Acid!
Since Sodium Hydroxide is a base and hydrochloric acid is an acid, you will make water and sodium chloride.
borate buffer
They makes sodium chloride (salt) and water
Nitric Acid + Sodium Hydroxide Solution = Fertilizer + 3x Water
If you simply dump reactants together without careful measurements then you will have something left over. Say you want to make sodium nitrate by reacting sodium hydroxide with nitric acid. The two chemicals react in a 1:1 ration, meaning that one mole of sodium hydroxide reacts with one mole of nitric acid; no more, no less. If you simply dump a vat of nitric acid into a vat of sodium hydroxide you don't know how much of each substance you are mixing and chances are you will have more of one than the other. If there is more nitric acid than sodium hydroxide, then there will by nitric acid left over. You get a similar problem if you end up adding to much sodium hydroxide. The end result is that the product you want is contaminated by an excess of one reactant and you have wasted chemicals. If you titrate you will be able to mix together your reactants in exactly the right amounts (within a small margin of error) so that the end product is as pure as you can make it and you waste as little of your reactants as you can.
This is the nitric acid (HNO3).
Sodium Hydroxide and Sulphuric Acid!
Since Sodium Hydroxide is a base and hydrochloric acid is an acid, you will make water and sodium chloride.
hydrochloric acid and sodium hydroxide
Hydrochloric acid and sodium hydroxide.
borate buffer
The product of this reaction is Th(NO3)2.
They makes sodium chloride (salt) and water
khonnay
Sodium hydroxide and fat react to form fatty acid salts (essentially soap), and glycerin.