Precipitate of Silver Bromide.
Nothing
An aqueous mixture of zinc chloride and silver nitrate would be insoluble silver chloride. Water and oxides of nitrogen will also be produced during the reaction.
AgNO3 (aq) is the formula for aqueous silver nitrate.
Yellow Precipitate of Silver Bromide
Silver bromide is insoluble in water and don't react with sodium nitrate.
Nothing
An aqueous mixture of zinc chloride and silver nitrate would be insoluble silver chloride. Water and oxides of nitrogen will also be produced during the reaction.
AgNO3 (aq) is the formula for aqueous silver nitrate.
Yellow Precipitate of Silver Bromide
Silver bromide is insoluble in water and don't react with sodium nitrate.
Since the Ksp of AgBr is less than the Ksp of AgNO3, you can predict that the AgBr will precipitate out of solution and leave NO3- in the solution
Sodium bromide (NaBr) and Silver nitrate is AgNO3 When mixed in aqueous solution pale yellow(cream) coloured silver bromide will precipitate down . NaBr(aq) + AgNO3(aq) = AgBr(s) + NaNO3(aq) NB THis is the classic test for halogens. AgF remains in solution AgCl white ppt AgBr pale yellow ppt AgI yellow ppt.
pudding
2AgNO3 + MgBr2 ----> 2AgBr + Mg(NO3 ) 2
AgNO3+NaBr--->NaNO3+AgBr
When a substance is aqueous, it means that it is dissolved in water. In aqueous reactions, the reaction is always a double replacement reaction, meaning one ion of a compound will switch with an ion from the other compound. A precipitate is an substance that is not soluble in water, meaning it cannot be dissolved. You can tell whether or not a substance is precipitate using a solubility chart. Therefore, using a solubility chart, we can tell that the product silver bromide will be the precipitate and the product potassium nitrate will be aqueous.
Yes, it is correct.