A more reactive element displace the less reactive element from a compound.
Example: Fe + CuSO4 = Cu + FeSO4
A single-replacement reaction
single replacement reaction
After a single replacement reaction this two chemicals will create zinc nitrate, Zn(NO3)2. This happens because zinc has a more reactive composition than silver.
A single replacement reaction involve the replacement of an element with other in the molecule as in this model:A + B-C = A-C + B.
Condensation Reaction.
This is not a replacement reaction. And the silicon chloride is SiCl4.
Correctly represented, it's Mg + 2HCl --> MgCl2 + H2, and it's a single replacement reaction.
Most batteries work via a single replacement reaction.
The product of a single replacement reaction between zinc and silver nitrate is zinc nitrate and silver. The zinc replaces the silver in the compound because it is more reactive, causing a displacement reaction.
Yes, the reaction 2Fe + 3Br2 -> 2FeBr3 is a single-replacement reaction because iron is replacing bromine in the compound formed.
It can be, but it can also be other types of reaction. An example of an oxidation reaction that is also a single replacement would be Zn(s) + 2HCl ==> ZnCl2 + H2. In this reaction Zn is oxidized and H is reduced.
it's single-replacement. I took a test with a question like that and got 100%