With anything that contains Fe (3+) ions :-)
FeCl3 +KSCN + AgNO3
The chemical reaction is:3 KSCN + Fe(NO3)3 = Fe (SCN)3 + 3 KNO3The ferric thyocyanate is not soluble in water.
bill
58.08 (SCN-) + 39.10 (K+) = 97.18 gram/mol KSCN0.1 N = 0.1 M = 0.1 (mol/L) * 97.18 (g/mol) = 9.718 g KSCN per litre.
Yes.. it is solid KSCN melted, so the ions transport the electricity. In the other hand solid KSCN would not transport any electricity.
It will not react with, but it will dissolve IN water, giving free K+ and SCN- ions.
With anything that contains Fe (3+) ions :-)
FeCl3 +KSCN + AgNO3
Yes
potassium thiocyanate
10 g KSCN; add distilled water for a total volume of 1 L
The chemical reaction is:3 KSCN + Fe(NO3)3 = Fe (SCN)3 + 3 KNO3The ferric thyocyanate is not soluble in water.
Na2CO3 is added to prevent oxidation of cu+ ions which are repeatedly formed by reaction of Cu++ and I-.So, to prevent oxidation co2 is used in retarding reaction
potassium thiocyanate
I'm not sure what happens when you add nacl, but kscn and hcl reacts to from an intensely red color in the presence of iron.
We usually heat KSCN Fe solution before titration with EDTA so as to produce crystalline crust forms.