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Strontium nitrate and ammonium carbonate are both easily soluble in water.
When combined, these two compounds produce a precipitate of Silver iodide and Strontium nitrate.
Silver nitrate and sodium sulphate produce a white precipitate, silver iodate. Zinc chloride and ammonium sulfide also produce a white precipitate, zinc sulfide. Special caution has to be taken not to let the ammonium sulfide give of gas where anyone can breathe it.
- potassium chloride - ammonium and calcium nitrate - ammonium and sodium phosphates - ammonium sulfate etc.
The reaction is:LNaCl + AgNO3 = AgCl + NaNO3The white precipitate is silver chloride.
No. Ammonium nitrate is water soluble.
- Dissolve ammonium chloride in water.- Add some crystals of silver nitrate and stir.- A white precipitate of silver chloride is formed.
Strontium nitrate and ammonium carbonate are both easily soluble in water.
Ammonium nitrate is NH4NO3 Ammonium chloride is NH4Cl
A white precipitate of silver chloride (AgCl) is formed.
Sodium chloride is NaCl. Ammonium nitrate is NH4NO3.
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.
When combined, these two compounds produce a precipitate of Silver iodide and Strontium nitrate.
an example of a precipitate is: silver nitrate + sodium chloride = silver chloride and sodium nitrate the precipitate is the silver chloride it forms a white powder
If the silver nitrate and ammonium chloride are both in solution when mixed, the very sparingly soluble silver chloride precipitates as a solid, leaving ammonium nitrate in the solution.
Sodium Chloride (NaCl) and Ammonium Nitrate (NH4NO3) are both separate compounds. However, both of them are salts.
Silver Chloride (AgCl) is the precipitate in this reaction.