NH4OH(aq) + HNO3(aq) --> NH4NO3(aq) + H2O(l) Aqueous ammonium nitrate and water are products.
double replacement
Ammoniam nitrate is produced
Ammonia gas is amphoteric.
niatric
No. Copper will not react with most acids. It will react with nitric acid to produce nitrogen dioxide. Gold and platinum will not react with nitric acid but will react with aqua regia, a mixture of hydrochloric and nitric acids to produce nitrogen dioxide and some nitric oxide. Rhenium does not react with acid at all.
Lots of metals react with acids. It depends on exactly what acid, and the concentration of that acid. A mixture of concentrated nitric acid and hydrochloric acid (aqua regia, royal water) will react with gold and other precious metals. The alkali metals will react readily with acid, as will most metals. You have to know that any metal with incomplete orbital has the ability to react with any proton donating species. (proton donating species are acids according to Bronston-Lowry theory)
no metal can not react with acid to give Carbondioxide gas but a hydrogen gas HCl + Na-------->NaCl(s) + H(g)
Acids don't actually melt metal, they oxidize or corrode them. Usually producing the corresponding metal salt and hydrogen gas. Most strong acids (hydrochloric, hydrobromic, hydroiodic, perchloric, nitric, and sulfuric acids) will oxidize metals in this manner. Some weak acids such as hydrofluoric acid can oxidize metals. Some metals, such as the alkali metals and alkaline earth metals will react with virtually any acid and even water. Nitric acid can oxidize copper, which normally doesn't react with acid. Aqua regia, a mixture of nitric acid and hydrochloric acid will oxidize gold and platinum, which are usually considered immune to corrosion.
Sodium and potassium
Magnesium will react with nitric acid and most other acids to produce hydrogen gas.
when nitric acid and iron react together Iron Nitrate is formed and hydrogen gas
Potassium will react with nitric acid to produce potassium nitrate and hydrogen gas. 2K + 2HNO3 --> 2KNO3 + H2
what you can do is to have it react with hydrogen peroxide at low temperature. When these react you get nitric acid: 2NO2 + H2O2 -> 2HNO3
No. Copper will not react with most acids. It will react with nitric acid to produce nitrogen dioxide. Gold and platinum will not react with nitric acid but will react with aqua regia, a mixture of hydrochloric and nitric acids to produce nitrogen dioxide and some nitric oxide. Rhenium does not react with acid at all.
Nitric acid is the chief source for the production of nitrogenous fertilizers.Specifically, vaporized ammonia from natural gas can be mixed with air and then burned over a platinum/rhodium catalyst. It cools as nitric oxide. It oxidizes with the remaining oxygen to nitrogen dioxide. It produces nitric acid when absorbed in water.
When vapours of nitric acid and Methane gas are heated in a closed container, Nitro methane and water vapours are produce , CH4 + HNO3 --- heat---> CH3-NO2 + H2O
NH3 + H+ ---> NH4+ This is because nitric acid, a strong acid, exists as completely ionized form, whereas ammonia exists mostly as un-ionized in water. The product is a soluble, completely ionized salt.
Yes,they can undergo a neutralization reaction, the reaction between sulfuric acid and ammonia is feasible.
The products are sodium benzoate and ammonia gas.
Ammonia cant be as it would react - neither can phosphine
The Calcium displaces hydrogen from the nitric acid, producing calcium nitrate and hydrogen gas. Ca + 2HNO3 --> Ca(NO3)2 + H2