There is no reaction
Ammonium Nitrate + Water
No reaction will occur between Potassium Sulfate and Ammonium Nitrate.
It produces Ammonium Nitrate
Ammonium nitrate is NH4NO3 and is formed by reacting ammonia (NH3) with nitric acid (HNO3). Ammonium sulfate is (NH4)2SO4 and is formed by reacting ammonia (NH3) with sulfuric acid (H2SO4)
When ammonia dissolves in water it forms ammonium hydroxide by the reaction NH3 + H2O -> NH4OH Ammonium Hydroxide is a base which reacts with acids, in the case nitric, by the reaction NH4OH + HNO3 -> NH4NO3 + H2O
Ammonium Nitrate + Water
No reaction will occur between Potassium Sulfate and Ammonium Nitrate.
It produces Ammonium Nitrate
A simple reaction: nitric acid plus ammonia solution.
nitrate of ammonia
Ammonium nitrate is NH4NO3 and is formed by reacting ammonia (NH3) with nitric acid (HNO3). Ammonium sulfate is (NH4)2SO4 and is formed by reacting ammonia (NH3) with sulfuric acid (H2SO4)
When ammonia dissolves in water it forms ammonium hydroxide by the reaction NH3 + H2O -> NH4OH Ammonium Hydroxide is a base which reacts with acids, in the case nitric, by the reaction NH4OH + HNO3 -> NH4NO3 + H2O
since ammonium nitrate decomposes on heating so ammonium nitrate is covered with excess of calcium hydroxide with some water and then heated to get ammonia
Ammonium nitrate itself is usually made by reacting ammonia with nitric acid. It does not occur naturally.
Ammonium nitrate is obtained: NH4OH + HNO3 = NH4NO3 + H2O
No, it is not used, the industrial preparation of Ammonium Nitrate depends on simple neutralization reaction between ammonia (Base) and Nitric (Acid) giving Ammonium Nitrate. Even the process of prilling or granulation doesn't include addition of Acetone. I believe the Ammonium Nitrate Acetone mixture is hazard as it is a combination of strong oxidizer and highly inflammable substance. Regards;
koh+ hno3>h2o+kno3