No, salt is not silver sulfide. Salt is sodium chloride, a compound made of sodium and chloride ions, while silver sulfide is a compound made of silver and sulfur ions. They have different chemical compositions and properties.
Open salt is a uncovered kitchenware which contain salt.
No, silver salts refer to a broad category of compounds containing silver combined with other elements, while silver nitrate specifically refers to the salt formed when silver is combined with nitric acid. Silver nitrate is a type of silver salt, but not all silver salts are silver nitrate.
Silver sulfide is composed of silver, a metal, and sulfur, a non-metal; therefore, it is an ionic compound and a salt.
Yes, silver sulfate is a salt. It is an ionic compound composed of silver ions (Ag+) and sulfate ions (SO4 2-).
When silver nitrate is added to distilled water, it will dissociate into silver ions (Ag+) and nitrate ions (NO3-), causing the solution to become slightly acidic. When silver nitrate is added to a salt solution, it will react with the salt to form a precipitate of insoluble silver salt, such as silver chloride (AgCl). This will cause a milky white precipitate to form in the solution.
Impossale to tell. Added: If the salt solution contains chloride ion (eg. from table salt, NaCl) then silver chloride will precipitate. Both sodium and nitrate ions stay unchanged in solution.Ag+aq + Cl-aq --> AgCls
If the zinc salt is soluble and the analogous silver salt is not, silver will displace the zinc as the silver salt precipitates out. For example, zinc chloride is soluble, but the solubility of silver chloride is very low. If silver nitrate is added to a zinc chloride solution, silver chloride will precipitate out, leaving zinc nitrate in solution.
The white solid that forms when aqueous solutions of table salt (sodium chloride) and silver nitrate are mixed is silver chloride (AgCl). This is a precipitate formed due to the reaction between the silver ions from silver nitrate and the chloride ions from table salt.
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When you mix silver nitrate with table salt (sodium chloride), a white precipitate of silver chloride forms. This reaction occurs because silver nitrate and table salt react to form insoluble silver chloride. This reaction is often used in chemistry experiments to demonstrate the formation of a precipitate.
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