No. Iron is a more reactive metal than silver, so the iron will replace the silver in the silver nitrate solution, forming an iron nitrate solution and solid silver. Eventually, the iron container will be gone, its atoms having gone into the iron nitrate solution.
Iron (II) nitrate and elemental copper.
Iron nitrate and metallic copper.
The chemical formula of iron(III) nitrate is Fe(NO3)3. Subscripts are "3".
The products are iron (II) nitrate and copper.
anhydrous iron(III) nitrate (ferric nitrate) is Fe(NO3)3 there is a hydrate Fe(NO3)9H2O Iron(II) nitrate (ferrous nitrate) is Fe(NO3)2.
The aqueous color disolved to .001 M of iron nitrate is purple or violet. (Not brownish orange). The individual crystals in a dry state are also a pale violet color.
Iron II nitrate contains an iron ion with a 2+ charge and has the formula Fe(NO3)2. Iron III nitrate contains an iron ion with a 3+ charge and has the formula Fe(NO3)3
Aqueous sodium phosphate and aqueous iron nitrate react to produce aqueous sodium nitrate and solid iron phosphate.
3Mg + 2Fe(NO3)3 ----> 3Mg(NO3)2 + 2Fe
No. Iron is a more reactive metal than silver, so the iron will replace the silver in the silver nitrate solution, forming an iron nitrate solution and solid silver. Eventually, the iron container will be gone, its atoms having gone into the iron nitrate solution.
The formula for the compound Iron (II) Nitratrate (or Ferrous Nitrate) is Fe(NO3)2
Barium nitrate + Iron = [No reaction] Ba(NO3)2 + Fe = [No reaction]
no
Iron (II) nitrate and elemental copper.
Iron nitrate and metallic copper.
Nothing. Copper is lower than iron in the electromotive series and will not replace the iron in the iron nitrate solution.