Silver chromate is not soluble in water.
The reaction between silver and barium typically forms silver nitrate and barium nitrate. Silver and barium are both metals and can undergo a single displacement reaction where the more reactive metal, in this case, silver, displaces the less reactive metal, barium, in the compound.
The spectator ions in the reaction between silver sulfate and barium nitrate are nitrate (NO3-) ions and sulfate (SO4^2-) ions. These ions do not participate in the formation of the precipitate (barium sulfate) and remain unchanged throughout the reaction.
The spectator ions are Ag+ and (NO3)-.
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Potassium Chromate precipitates with and coumpnd that contains a cation and NO3, also known as the polyatomic ion Nitrate. Three common examples of this are Zinc Nitrate (Zn(NO3)2) Silver Nitrate (AgNO3) and Baruim Nitrate (Ba(NO3)2)
To balance the reaction between silver and barium, you first need to determine the chemical formulas of their compounds. Silver forms Ag+ ions while barium forms Ba2+ ions. When they react, they form silver nitrate (AgNO3) and barium chloride (BaCl2). The balanced equation is 2AgNO3 + BaCl2 -> 2AgCl + Ba(NO3)2. This is a double displacement reaction.
I believe that would be Barium nitrate or Ba(NO3)2
Silver nitrate plus potassium iodide yields silver iodide plus potassium nitrate.
Potassium nitrate is too stable and so is silver for these two species to react. There is thus no balanced equation.
Yes, a reaction will occur between niobium sulfate and barium nitrate in an aqueous solution, forming a precipitate of barium niobate. This compound is insoluble in water and will settle out of the solution.
The word equation for silver nitrate plus sodium chloride is "silver nitrate + sodium chloride → silver chloride + sodium nitrate". The symbol equation for this reaction is "AgNO3 + NaCl → AgCl + NaNO3".
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