Whitish yellow
Silver iodide is typically white or yellowish in color.
Lead iodide (PbI2) is a compound consisting of lead and iodine, whereas silver chloride (AgCl) is a compound made up of silver and chlorine. Lead iodide is yellow in color and is more soluble in water compared to silver chloride, which is white in color and has low solubility in water. Lead iodide has different chemical and physical properties compared to silver chloride, due to the different elements it contains.
For silver halogens Silver Fluoride ; No colour , remians in solution Silver Chloride ; White ppt Silver Bromide ; Cream/Pale yellow ppt Silver Iodide ; Yellow ppt. These are the classic test colours for silver halogens.
Silver iodide is written as AgI, where Ag represents silver and I represents iodide.
The chemical symbol for silver iodide is AgI.
Silver iodide is typically white or yellowish in color.
Lead iodide (PbI2) is a compound consisting of lead and iodine, whereas silver chloride (AgCl) is a compound made up of silver and chlorine. Lead iodide is yellow in color and is more soluble in water compared to silver chloride, which is white in color and has low solubility in water. Lead iodide has different chemical and physical properties compared to silver chloride, due to the different elements it contains.
Silver(I) iodide
For silver halogens Silver Fluoride ; No colour , remians in solution Silver Chloride ; White ppt Silver Bromide ; Cream/Pale yellow ppt Silver Iodide ; Yellow ppt. These are the classic test colours for silver halogens.
It exists as a solid and is a bright yellow color.
Silver iodide is written as AgI, where Ag represents silver and I represents iodide.
When potassium iodide (KI) reacts with silver nitrate (AgNO₃), a bright yellow precipitate of silver iodide (AgI) is formed. This occurs due to the double displacement reaction between the two compounds. The overall reaction can be represented as: KI + AgNO₃ → AgI (s) + KNO₃. The yellow color of the precipitate is characteristic of silver iodide.
The chemical symbol for silver iodide is AgI.
The chemical formula for silver iodide is AgI. It is a compound formed by the combination of the silver (Ag) cation and the iodide (I) anion. Silver iodide is commonly used in cloud seeding to induce rainfall.
Silver nitrate solution and potassium iodide solution can be mixed to form silver iodide due to a double displacement reaction where the silver ions from silver nitrate react with the iodide ions from potassium iodide to form insoluble silver iodide precipitate. The balanced chemical equation for this reaction is: AgNO3 (aq) + KI (aq) → AgI (s) + KNO3 (aq).
When silver nitrate reacts with potassium iodide, a precipitation reaction occurs where silver iodide is formed. The balanced chemical equation for this reaction is: AgNO3 + KI -> AgI + KNO3. The silver iodide formed will appear as a yellow solid precipitate.
When silver nitrate and strontium iodide react, a double displacement reaction occurs. Silver iodide and strontium nitrate are formed as products. Silver iodide is a yellow precipitate while strontium nitrate remains in solution.