When potassium reacts with water the potassium burns a bright purple light, a gas is given off with a hissing noise and the potassium rockets around the surface of the water because it floats.
Sodium chloride and potassium sulfate will not react.
You get a mixture of potassium and magnesium. They're metals; they don't react with each other.
It produces Potassium nitrate and Lead iodide
Nothing, they don't react with each other: K + Au --> 0
Oxidised from Fe2+ to Fe2+
Silver iodide (AgI), a precipitate insoluble in water, don't react with potassium nitrate.
Potassium metal will react violently with water to form KOH and hydrogen gas. Due to the heat released by the reaction - the hydrogen gas will ignite. So: placing potassium in water will cause a fire!
No, they do not
Potassium react violent with water, iron react only if oxygen is present.
Sodium chloride and potassium sulfate will not react.
Solid, pure, potassium metal will react violently with water to form hydrogen gas. Often this hydrogen gas will ignite causing a flame and sometimes an explosion.
You get a mixture of potassium and magnesium. They're metals; they don't react with each other.
It produces Potassium nitrate and Lead iodide
Yes, they react tor form water and the corresponding potassium carboxylate salt.
No. Potassium will react violently on contact with water. Potassium is stored under oil to protect it from air and water.
you die of bicsamotosis if you breathe it in
Nothing, they don't react with each other: K + Au --> 0