Silver Chloride (AgCl) is the precipitate in this reaction.
When silver nitrate reacts with hydrochloride a white precipitate of Silver Chloride is formed.
Silver chloride is the precipitate in this reaction. CuCl(aq) + AgNO3(aq)-->CuNO3(aq) + AgCl(s)
A white precipitate of silver chloride (AgCl) is formed.
When clhlorine is added to silver nitrate a milky white precipitate of Silver Chloride is formed. Potassium nitrate is also formed. When chlorine is added to potassium chloride nothing visible happens but the solutiuon become more acidic.
Silver nitrate and lead nitrate do not react, so there would be no precipitate.
In this reaction white precipitates of Silver chloride are formed.
When silver nitrate reacts with hydrochloride a white precipitate of Silver Chloride is formed.
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
Silver chloride is the precipitate in this reaction. CuCl(aq) + AgNO3(aq)-->CuNO3(aq) + AgCl(s)
A white precipitate of silver chloride (AgCl) is formed.
when sodium chloride and silver nitrate reacts then we get silver chloride and sodium nitrate.
When clhlorine is added to silver nitrate a milky white precipitate of Silver Chloride is formed. Potassium nitrate is also formed. When chlorine is added to potassium chloride nothing visible happens but the solutiuon become more acidic.
Silver nitrate and lead nitrate do not react, so there would be no precipitate.
silver chloride should precipitate out.
huG A panda
Yes, it is correct.
The insoluble white substance (precipitate) is silver chloride, AgCl, which is insoluble in water.