Chloride anions form a white precipitate of silver chloride when mixed in solution with silver nitrate.
Silver and iodine, when combined, forms Silver Iodide (AgI). Silver iodide is not soluble in water and will form a precipitate.
Hydroxide ion ( -OH)
Chlorine (Cl) Nacl
CrO4
Silver chloride (AgCl) gives a white precipitate. Silver Bromide (AgBr) also gives a white precipitate, though it's a slightly more creamy white than the precipitate formed by AgCl. Silver iodide (AgI) gives a pale yellow precipitate.
Silver is disolved in the acid as Silver Nitrate. Silver + Nitric Acid -> Silver Nitrate + Hydrogen
ag+hg gives aghg
Gives white precipitate when Sulfuric acid added!
CrO4
all the organic compounds and nitrates of metals and ammonium do not form ppts with silver nitrate.
chloride and sulphate ions give white precipitate with silver ion in aqueous solution but sulphate gives slightly dirty white.
Silver chloride (AgCl) gives a white precipitate. Silver Bromide (AgBr) also gives a white precipitate, though it's a slightly more creamy white than the precipitate formed by AgCl. Silver iodide (AgI) gives a pale yellow precipitate.
Nothing - barium chloride is soluble. You can however precipitate either the barium (e.g. with sodium sulphate, giving barium sulpate, or the chloride, e.g. with silver nitrate giving silver chloride precipitate.
It gives green color . Copper is more reactive than silver therefore it displaces silver from silver nitrate and forms silver + copper nitrate
This is probable an error.
Silver is disolved in the acid as Silver Nitrate. Silver + Nitric Acid -> Silver Nitrate + Hydrogen
as silver nitrate reacts with iron(AgNO3+Fe gives FeNO3+Ag)(decomposition reaction).
Yes: intern electrolysis, nitrate is tribune-ion, (Zn)s + 2(Ag+)aq --> (Zn2+)aq + 2(Ag)s
ag+hg gives aghg
This compound is potassium chloride.