Want this question answered?
Silver nitrate + Potassium iodide ----> Silver iodide + Potassium nitrate AgNO3 + KI ----> AgI + KNO3
Potassium nitrate and a precipitate of Silver iodide are formed
learn your chemistry and find out.... Bye
No silver cannot react. It is less reactive than potassium
The equation for reaction between silver nitrate and sodium iodide in water solution is AgNO3 (aq) + NaI (aq) = NaNO3 (aq) + AgI (s).
Silver phosphate, Ag3PO4 precipitated in potassium nitrate solution (K+ and NO3-)
no
Silver nitrate + Potassium iodide ----> Silver iodide + Potassium nitrate AgNO3 + KI ----> AgI + KNO3
Potassium nitrate and a precipitate of Silver iodide are formed
Silver nitrate + Potassium iodide ----> Silver iodide + Potassium nitrate AgNO3 + KI ----> AgI + KNO3
Do you want that for Monopotassium phosphate, dipotassium phosphate, or tripotassium phosphate? --------------------------------- To clarify for the previous answerer, ionic compounds inherently don't use the mono-, di-, or tri- system used for molecular compounds. Instead, when a cation and an anion is supplied, the ionic compound assumes the number of cations and anions that will generate a neutral ionic compound. In this case, since K is 1+ and PO4 is 3-, the compound potassium phosphate always refers to K3PO4. Therefore: 3AgNO3 + K3PO4 -> 3KNO3 + Ag3PO4
Potassium iodide + silver nitrate --> Silver iodide and potassium nitrate The chemical equation is: K+I- (aq) + Ag+[NO3]- (aq) --> AgI (s) + K+[NO3]- (aq)
learn your chemistry and find out.... Bye
Silver iodide (AgI), a precipitate insoluble in water, don't react with potassium nitrate.
Ag(NO3)(aq) + KI(aq) ---> K(NO3)(aq) + AgI(s)
No silver cannot react. It is less reactive than potassium
The equation for reaction between silver nitrate and sodium iodide in water solution is AgNO3 (aq) + NaI (aq) = NaNO3 (aq) + AgI (s).