Just potassium nitrate in water. Aqueous stands for anything with water, so if you take dry potassium nitrate and add some water to it until it dissolves, you have made an aqueous solution of potassium nitrate.
Yes
no reaction occurs .. they just mix together.
Aqueous barium nitrate is colorless.
Technically, yes. Potassium nitrate is a potassium atom attached to the nitrate ion.
The chemical formula for potassium nitrate is KNO3.
Yes
A dilute aqueous solution of potassium nitrate would be classified as an electrolyte due to the presence of potassium ions (K+) and nitrate ions (NO3-) that can conduct electricity when dissolved in water.
Yes, when metallic potassium is added to an aqueous solution of zinc nitrate, a single replacement reaction occurs. The potassium replaces the zinc in the compound to form potassium nitrate and zinc metal. This reaction is represented by the chemical equation: 2K(s) + Zn(NO3)2(aq) -> 2KNO3(aq) + Zn(s)
The net ionic equation for the reaction of aqueous potassium iodide with aqueous lead (II) nitrate is: 2I⁻(aq) + Pb²⁺(aq) -> PbI₂(s)
no reaction occurs .. they just mix together.
Potassium nitrate is soluble in water, as it is an ionic solid. When dissolved in water, potassium nitrate will form an aqueous solution of potassium and nitrate ions.
potassium nitrate would be left was an aqueous solution and lead iodide would be the precipitate
The net ionic equation for the reaction between aqueous potassium iodide (KI) and aqueous lead(II) nitrate (Pb(NO3)2) is: 2I- (aq) + Pb2+ (aq) → PbI2 (s)
The reaction equation for potassium nitrate (KNO3) with water (H2O) is: KNO3 (s) + H2O (l) -> K+ (aq) + NO3- (aq) + H2O. This reaction is a dissolution reaction, where the solid potassium nitrate dissolves in water to form aqueous potassium ions, nitrate ions, and water molecules.
When ammonium nitrate solution is mixed with aqueous potassium phosphate, a precipitate of ammonium phosphate forms due to a double displacement reaction. Ammonium phosphate is insoluble in water and therefore will appear as a solid precipitate in the solution.
NH4NO3(aq) + KCL(aq) --> KNO3(s) + NH4CL(aq) This is a type of metathesis reaction called a double displacement reaction. Aqueous ammonium nitrate and aqueous potassium chloride yields solid potassium nitrate and aqueous ammonium chloride. Essentially the cations and anions of the reactants switch, and potassium nitrate (one of the products) precipitates out of the solution as a solid. The ammonium chloride (the other product formed) remains dissociated as ions in the solution. The above reaction is balanced.
KNO3 is the chemical formula of potassium nitrate.