it's make fire
When ammonia reacts with ammonium nitrate, it forms ammonium hydroxide and ammonium nitrate, as shown in the equation: NH3 + NH4NO3 -> NH4OH + NH4NO3
Ammonium hydroxide and nitric acid yield ammonium nitrate and water.
Nitric acid reacts with ammonium hydrate to produce ammonium nitrate (a salt) and water.
1 mole of ammonium nitrate produces one mole of nitrogen. Actually the amount (in moles) of nitrogen will depend on how much NH4NO3 you are starting with, what other reactant you are combining it with and whether or not the NH4NO3 completely reacts. Since you will never be able to retrieve all of the nitrogen (either the NH4 or the NO3 will retain some nitrogen depending upon the reaction), you can reasonably expect to get 1 mole of N2 for each 14.01 grams of Ammonium nitrate that COMPLETELY reacts.
Ammonium nitrate is obtained: NH4OH + HNO3 = NH4NO3 + H2O
When silver nitrate reacts with ammonium chloride, a white precipitate of silver chloride forms along with ammonium nitrate. This reaction is a double displacement reaction where the silver ion in the silver nitrate switches places with the ammonium ion in the ammonium chloride, resulting in the formation of the two new compounds.
When ammonia reacts with ammonium nitrate, it forms ammonium hydroxide and ammonium nitrate, as shown in the equation: NH3 + NH4NO3 -> NH4OH + NH4NO3
The reaction between calcium nitrate and sodium oxalate should produce calcium oxalate as a by-product, along with sodium nitrate. Calcium oxalate is insoluble in water and will precipitate out of solution, while sodium nitrate will remain dissolved.
It will if it reacts with a strong enough base.
it foams and makes a white salt like substance
Ammonium sulfate reacts with barium nitrate to form ammonium nitrate and barium sulfate. (NH4)2SO4 + Ba(NO3)2 ==> 2NH4NO3 + BaSO4 It is a double replacement reaction. that is the correct answer
When ammonium nitrate is added to sodium hydroxide, a double displacement reaction occurs. Ammonium nitrate reacts with sodium hydroxide to form ammonium hydroxide and sodium nitrate. The overall reaction is NH4NO3 + NaOH -> NH4OH + NaNO3. This reaction is exothermic and can produce heat.
Ammonium hydroxide and nitric acid yield ammonium nitrate and water.
Nitric acid reacts with ammonium hydrate to produce ammonium nitrate (a salt) and water.
There is no formula. This is a mixture and reacts only in forms of ratio to determine the endothermic properties. The amount of water and Ammonium nitrate can be changed and it will still react the same.
When ammonium hydroxide, silver nitrate, and glucose are heated together, the glucose reacts with silver nitrate to form silver mirrors. This is a common test for the presence of reducing sugars like glucose. The ammonium hydroxide serves to dissolve the silver nitrate and facilitate the reaction.
1 mole of ammonium nitrate produces one mole of nitrogen. Actually the amount (in moles) of nitrogen will depend on how much NH4NO3 you are starting with, what other reactant you are combining it with and whether or not the NH4NO3 completely reacts. Since you will never be able to retrieve all of the nitrogen (either the NH4 or the NO3 will retain some nitrogen depending upon the reaction), you can reasonably expect to get 1 mole of N2 for each 14.01 grams of Ammonium nitrate that COMPLETELY reacts.