AgCl
No, its very soluble at least greater than 10 grams per litre
silver chloride forms, which is insoluble in aqua regia, HCl, or HNO3. silver chloride is soluble in ammonium solutions but this can become very dangerous, as fulminate forms and can detonate when dried, acidifying them with HCl to precipitate the silver and form ammonium chloride solution is a safe way to handle them. insolubility of silver chloride in aqua regia is one reason karat gold is inquatered, and parted in nitric before dissolving gold in aqua regia, the insoluble silver chloride will crust over the gold (from silver in the karat gold), and aqua regia cannot dissolve the gold with an layer of silver chloride protecting the gold from the acids. some small amounts of silver chloride is soluble in aqua regia, remember soluble, or insoluble are relative terms, and can be affected by temperature, PH and so on. metal refiner Richard B.
Calcite is the most stable polymorphous form of calcium carbonate (CaCO3), a very common insoluble mineral salt. Though it contains Carbon and Oxygen it is not considered to be organic.
Silver ingots, as we normally see them, are usually essentially Pure Silver (element) with a very small percent of impurities alloyed (mixture.)
that it is insoluble and will not disslove because it is a sloute
Practically not, AgCl being very insoluble in water.
Silver chloride, which is very insoluble, would precipitate out of the solution
There is no reaction, because silver iodide is very insoluble.
No, its very soluble at least greater than 10 grams per litre
Silver nitrate is not a very stable compound.
Many metal sulphides are very insoluble in water but sodium sulphide (Na2S) is a soluble compound.
NaNO3 is highly soluble in room-temperature water.
Silver nitrate is a strong conductor when dissolved in water. As a solid compound it is a very poor conductor.
Insoluble. Metallic sulfides are very poorly soluble in water.
Compounds can be classified as organic( containing carbon) or inorganic( not containing carbon).
Sodium chloride is highly polar (ionic in fact) where hexane is very not. The two don't attract at all, so each is insoluble in the other.
silver chloride forms, which is insoluble in aqua regia, HCl, or HNO3. silver chloride is soluble in ammonium solutions but this can become very dangerous, as fulminate forms and can detonate when dried, acidifying them with HCl to precipitate the silver and form ammonium chloride solution is a safe way to handle them. insolubility of silver chloride in aqua regia is one reason karat gold is inquatered, and parted in nitric before dissolving gold in aqua regia, the insoluble silver chloride will crust over the gold (from silver in the karat gold), and aqua regia cannot dissolve the gold with an layer of silver chloride protecting the gold from the acids. some small amounts of silver chloride is soluble in aqua regia, remember soluble, or insoluble are relative terms, and can be affected by temperature, PH and so on. metal refiner Richard B.