Correct. Your products will be barium nitrate, which is water soluble (all nitrates are soluble) and silver chloride, which is one of the few insoluble chlorides. There are three equations you can write for this reaction:
1. Normal balanced chemical equation: BaCl2 + 2AgNO3 --> Ba(NO3)2 + 2AgCl
2. Full ionic equation: Ba+2 + 2Cl- + 2Ag+ + NO3- --> Ba+2 + 2NO3- + 2Ag+ + 2Cl-
3. Net ionic equation: Ag+(aq) + Cl-(aq) --> AgCl(s)
The reaction is:LNaCl + AgNO3 = AgCl + NaNO3The white precipitate is silver chloride.
The sample of aluminum chloride be treated with some ammonia(1:1)aqueous solution and filtered.To the filterate add a few drops of 2N HNO3, aqueous solution, followed by a few drops of 1% aqueous solution of silver nitrate. Appearance of curdy white precipitate soluble in dilute ammonia aqueous solution would indicate presence of chloride. Since aluminum chloride is quite covalent, the chromyl chloride test may not be very effective
Silver nitrate for example: AgI(s) silver iodide
Just potassium nitrate in water. Aqueous stands for anything with water, so if you take dry potassium nitrate and add some water to it until it dissolves, you have made an aqueous solution of potassium nitrate.
42,09 g silver chloride are obtained.
Yes, it is correct.
Silver chloride, which is very insoluble, would precipitate out of the solution
huG A panda
If the solution that may contain chloride ions is aqueous, adding a solution of silver nitrate will cause a precipitate of silver chloride. (However, there are many other insoluble silver salts, so that this test is not specific to chloride.)
chloride and sulphate ions give white precipitate with silver ion in aqueous solution but sulphate gives slightly dirty white.
The reaction is:LNaCl + AgNO3 = AgCl + NaNO3The white precipitate is silver chloride.
Adding a solution of Sodium Sulphate to aqueous Barium Nitrate will produce a white precipitate of Barium Sulphate with Sodium Nitrate remaining in solution.
whencalcium chloride reacts with barium nitrate calcium nitrate and barium chloride wil be formed. whencalcium chloride reacts with barium nitrate calcium nitrate and barium chloride wil be formed.
To keep the kead nitrate in solution: otherwise it might precipitate lead.
The sample of aluminum chloride be treated with some ammonia(1:1)aqueous solution and filtered.To the filterate add a few drops of 2N HNO3, aqueous solution, followed by a few drops of 1% aqueous solution of silver nitrate. Appearance of curdy white precipitate soluble in dilute ammonia aqueous solution would indicate presence of chloride. Since aluminum chloride is quite covalent, the chromyl chloride test may not be very effective
A precipitate is a solid which 'falls down' from the solution. Thus silver chloride is the precipitate.
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