Yes.
AgNO3 + NaCl --> NaNO3 + AgCl
AgCl will form a milky white precipitate, where as NaNO3 is soluble in water.
Yes, AgI is insoluble, therefore will form a precipitate.
Yes. Silver hydroxide (AgOH) will precipitate out of solution.
Yes. A precipitate of Ba3(PO4)2 will form.
Use Silver nitrate. A yellow precipitate of silver iodide will form / AgNO3 + I^- = AgI(s) + NO3^- This is one of the classic tests for halogens.
Firstly add some AgNO3. You should see that no precipitate forms. If it forms a precipitate, it is not a SO42-.Then add some BaCl2 - If there are SO42- ions a white precipitate will form.
Yes, AgI is insoluble, therefore will form a precipitate.
When sodium chloride and silver nitrate are mixed, a metathesis reaction takes place. The silver ion becomes bonded to the chloride ion. Since silver chloride is insoluble, this substance precipitates out of solution.
No
Yes. Silver hydroxide (AgOH) will precipitate out of solution.
No.
The chemical reaction is:CaCl2 + 2 AgNO3 = 2 AgCl(s) + Ca(NO3)2The precipitate is silver chloride.
Yes. A precipitate of Ba3(PO4)2 will form.
You can make potassium chloride precipitate by adding silver nitrate (AgNO3). The chemical equation being AgNO3(aq)+ KCl(aq) = KNO3(aq) + AgCl(s) You know that silver nitrate will form a precipitate as you can see this on a solubility chart.
Chloride anions form a white precipitate of silver chloride when mixed in solution with silver nitrate.
When Sodium chloride is added to Silver nitrate; Both of these substances were originally colourless, however when merged a reaction occurred producing a white cloudy product (translucent). The chemical equation for this is; silver nitrate + sodium chloride --> silver chloride + sodium nitrate AgNO3(aq) + NaCl (aq) --> AgCl (s) + NaNO3 (aq)
Potassium chloride is react with AgNO3 , the chloride ion subtract from potassium chloride to form silver chloride precipitate and potassium nirate. KCl + AgNO3 → KNO3 + AgCl↓
The constant solubility product is modified.