yes, it would occur because iron is more reactive than copper (look at an activity series to see this). metals trade places in a single replacement reaction if the metal that is alone on the reactact side of the equation has a higher reactivity than the metal attached to the nonmetal.
It doesnt seem like you were answering THIS question??
Iron nitrate and metallic copper.
The products are iron (II) nitrate and copper.
Iron (II) nitrate and elemental copper.
Copper and silver nitrate combining is called a single-replacement reaction. Copper would replace silver in the compound and the silver would become a solid precipitate.
Iron nitrate and copper. Fe + Cu(NO3)2 -> Fe(NO3)2 + Cu
Iron nitrate and metallic copper.
The products are iron (II) nitrate and copper.
Iron (II) nitrate and elemental copper.
Copper and silver nitrate combining is called a single-replacement reaction. Copper would replace silver in the compound and the silver would become a solid precipitate.
Iron nitrate and copper. Fe + Cu(NO3)2 -> Fe(NO3)2 + Cu
The chemical formula for copper (I) nitrate is CuNO3.
Cu(No3)2 is the formula for copper nitrate compund
copper nitrate :)
The copper will replace the silver in the silver nitrate solution, and silver metal will come out of the solution. This is called a single replacement reaction. The following equation represents the reaction. 2AgNO3 + Cu ---> Cu(NO3)2 + 2Ag
The chemical formula of copper(II) nitrate is Cu(NO3)2.
Copper ammonium nitrate formula: Cu (NH3)4(NO3)2
None.