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The solution of potassium iodide (if it is not extremely diluted) is more dense.
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Not usually. Potassium iodide is usually present in a large excess. It is usually the potassium iodate that is the limiting ingredient.
It is the Iodine dissolved in aqueous Potassium(or Sodium) Iodide
No, KI (potassium iodide) is not a salt. It is a chemical compound that contains the elements potassium and iodine. While it does have an ionic bond, it is more accurately classified as an inorganic compound rather than a salt.
That would be a 5% solution of Lugol's iodine.
Find moles potassium iodide first.2.41 grams KI (1 mole KI/166 grams) = 0.01452 moles KIMolarity = moles of solute/Liters of solution ( 100 ml = 0.1 Liters )Molarity = 0.01452 moles KI/0.1 Liters= 0.145 M KI solution================
somehow. the potassium iodide act as a acidifying agent,
A precipitate of Lead iodide and Potassium nitrate are formed
The solution of potassium iodide (if it is not extremely diluted) is more dense.
Silver nitrate + Potassium iodide ----> Silver iodide + Potassium nitrate AgNO3 + KI ----> AgI + KNO3
Reddish precipitate of Mercuric iodide and clear solution of Potassium chloride is produced
no
A yellow precipitate of silver iodide (AgI).
In aqueous solution they would not react. They would form a solution of ferric ions, chloride ions, potassium ions, and iodide ions.
Ag(NO3)(aq) + KI(aq) ---> K(NO3)(aq) + AgI(s)
Lead iodide (Pb2I) precipitates as a yellow solid, leaving a solution of potassium and nitrate ions.