Sodium chloride is NaCl.
Ammonium nitrate is NH4NO3.
sodium chloride + ammonium nitrate would resolve to ammonium chloride and sodium nitrate due to a 2 salt swip swap like commonly demonstrated in "the golden book of chemistry" the No3 and the halgen group Cl swaping out on both compounds and causing the the respective products to be sodium nitrate NaNo3 and ammonium chloride NH4Cl NaCl + Nh4No3 ----> Nh4Cl + NaNo3 };]
Sodium Chloride (NaCl) and Ammonium Nitrate (NH4NO3) are both separate compounds. However, both of them are salts.
- potassium chloride - ammonium and calcium nitrate - ammonium and sodium phosphates - ammonium sulfate etc.
These two compounds doesn't react.
Im not quite sure, but since potassium chloride and ammonium nitrate forms kno3, theoretically, sodium chloride and ammonium nitrate would form sodium nitrate. (Im not 100% sure due to that sodium chloride is more soluble than potassium chloride.)
Examples are: sodium chloride, potassium chloride, calcium chloride, ammonium chloride, ammonium phosphates, sodium carbonate, sodium sulfate, magnesium sulfate, cooper sulfate, magnesium chloride.
Ammonium nitrate is NH4NO3 Ammonium chloride is NH4Cl
copper chloride
I suppose that the most suitable is the ammonium nitrate - NH4NO3.
Sodium chloride = hydrochloric acid, HCl Calcium sulfate = sulfuric acid, H2SO4 Ammonium nitrate = nitric acid, HNO3
The silver in the Silver Nitrate precipitates the chloride ions out of the ammonium chloride solution, leaving Ammonium Nitrate in solution and a Silver Chloride solid.
No. Ammonium nitrate contains the ammonium ion NH4+, and has the formula NH4NO3, and sodium nitrate has the formula NaNO3.