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Yes, calcium nitrate is an ionic crystalline salt of calcium normally encountered as the tetrahydrate, Ca(NO3)2.4H2O
Calcium nitrate has a neutral solution (pH=7).
francium ceasium Potassium Sodium Lithium These metals could react with calcium nitrate in a displacement reaction as they are more reactive. e.g. pottasium + calcium nitrate -> calcium + pottasium nitrate.
Calcium Chlorite (used in domestic Swimming Pools)
Yes. Ca(NO3)2=Ca2++2NO3-
22.5 M
Yes, calcium nitrate is an ionic crystalline salt of calcium normally encountered as the tetrahydrate, Ca(NO3)2.4H2O
Calcium nitrate don't react with metals; a possible reaction is with the water from the solution.
Calcium Chloride is the formula name for CaCl2.
No, they don't react with each other in aqueous solution and on heating nitrate becomes decomposed.
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Calcium nitride is Ca3N2 and is basic. Calcium nitrate is Ca(NO3)2 and is neutral.
There should not be a reaction being that usually elements do not react with their nitrates. But if the calcium nitrate solution was acqueous (water), the calcium will react with the water and as I found in my class, turned black and appeared to react. It does not react with the nitrate but the solution's water.
Calcium phophate will precipitate from sodium citrate solution
Calcium nitrate has a neutral solution (pH=7).
Melting point 561 °C (anhydrous) 42.7 °C (tetrahydrate)Boiling point decomposes (anhydrous) 132 °C (tetrahydrate) Calcium nitrate has the above data from the relevant wikipedia page. This means that at room temp (250C), it is solid
81.1 kj/mol