No. Phosphates are substances that contain groups made of phosphorus and oxygen, either as an ion (often PO43-) or a covalently bound group. Ammonia is NH3, a simple compound of nitrogen and hydrogen.
Ammonium phosphate can be made by reacting ammonia with phosphoric acid. The chemical equation for the reaction is: 2NH3 + H3PO4 → (NH4)2HPO4. The resulting product is ammonium phosphate.
Ammonium phosphate can be made by reacting phosphoric acid with ammonia. This reaction forms ammonium phosphate, which can then be concentrated and crystallized to obtain the final product. The chemical equation for this reaction is: H3PO4 + NH3 → (NH4)3PO4.
Ba2CH3CO2PO4 Barium + ammonia + carbon dioxide + phosphate
You can get DAP (Di-Ammonium Phosphate) or Map (Mono-Ammonium phosphate), depending on how they were reacted.
Phosphate fertilizer can be made by reacting phosphoric acid with ammonia or by treating phosphate rock with sulfuric acid. The resulting product is a concentrated source of phosphorus that can be used to improve plant growth and crop yields.
Ammonium phosphate is made from the chemicals ammonia (NH3) and phosphoric acid (H3PO4) in the following reaction: NH3 + H3PO4 → (NH4)3PO4
Ammonium phosphate is a salt produced from the reaction between ammonia and phosphoric acid. It consists of one ammonium ion (NH4+) and one phosphate ion (PO4^3-), so overall it contains two ions - one ammonium ion and one phosphate ion.
Water, oxygen, carbon dioxide, sodium chloride, ammonia, carbon monoxide, calcium phosphate etc
ammonia and phosphoric acid combines to for mono-ammonium phosphate (MAP) and if MAP is further reacted with ammonia then it gives di-ammonium phosphate (DAP) both reactions are exothermic in nature. reaction is as follows NH3 + H3PO4 ------> (NH4)H2PO4 (MAP) NH3 + NH4H2PO4 --------> (NH4)2HPO4 (DAP)
nun u retardd
Ammonia gas cannot be dried using concentrated H2SO4 and P2O5 because ammonia gas reacts with both chemicals. Ammonia reacts exothermically with concentrated H2SO4 to form ammonium sulfate and water. Similarly, ammonia reacts with P2O5 to form ammonium phosphate and water. These reactions do not effectively dry the ammonia gas as the water byproducts are produced.
There are too many to list. A few are water, nitrate compounds, ammonia compounds, phosphate compounds, sulfur compounds, silica, etc.