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A white precipitate of silver chloride (AgCl) is formed.
Silver Chloride (AgCl) is the precipitate in this reaction.
When silver nitrate reacts with hydrochloride a white precipitate of Silver Chloride is formed.
Formation of a precipitate is evidence of a chemical reaction.
silver nitrate (AgNO3)
- Dissolve ammonium chloride in water.- Add some crystals of silver nitrate and stir.- A white precipitate of silver chloride is formed.
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.
A white precipitate of silver chloride (AgCl) 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
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.
Silver Chloride (AgCl) is the precipitate in this reaction.
silver chloride should precipitate out.
A precipitate is a solid which 'falls down' from the solution. Thus silver chloride is the precipitate.
When silver nitrate reacts with hydrochloride a white precipitate of Silver Chloride is formed.
Because the product silver chloride is a white precipitate.
Formation of a precipitate is evidence of a chemical reaction.
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.