Lead iodide is very sparingly soluble in water (around 0.063 gL-1; Ks = 8.49 x 10-9) so when those compounds are mixed the lead iodide precipitates.
|About the CHEMICAL REACTION |
Sodium Iodide is a white powder while Lead Nitrate is a white crystal. Mix those two with water in separate containers. Add those 2 slowly into a empty jar and when the two mx it turns into a neon yellow liquid.
Lead iodide is very sparingly soluble in water (around 0.063 gL-1; Ks = 8.49 x 10-9) so when those compounds are mixed the lead iodide precipitates.
|About the CHEMICAL REACTION |
Sodium Iodide is a white powder while Lead Nitrate is a white crystal. Mix those two with water in separate containers. Add those 2 slowly into a empty jar and when the two mx it turns into a neon yellow liquid.
Yes: Unless the concentrations of both solutions are extremely small, lead sulfide would precipitate if the two solutions stated were mixed.
Yes. When you mix lead nitrate with sodium hydroxide, white-colored nitrates will precipitate.
I know of no compound containing the polyatomic ion nitrate that precipitates out of solution and sodium chloride ionizes in solution. So, no precipitates.
Pb(NO3)2(aq) + 2NaI(aq) ==> PbI2(s) + 2NaNO3(aq)
The precipitate is the insoluble lead iodide (PbI2).
The short answer is that lead iodide is insoluble in cold water.
no
Answer: Cupric hydroxide (as bluish white precipitate) and sodium nitrate. Cu(NO3)2 + 2NaOH --> Cu(OH)2 + 2NaNO3
AgNO3 + NaOH = AgOH + NaNO3 The silver hydroxide is an insoluble precipitate but also unstable: 2 AgOH----Ag2O + H2O
A white hydroxide: Ca(OH)2.
Forms a yellow precipitate
when they react, it forms copper hydroxide which is insoluble, and hence a precipitate in the resultant solution of sodium nitrate
no
When heat copper hydroxide and sodium Nitrate the pale blue precipitate change into black solid
you make a black precipitate.
Solutions of copper (II) compounds will undergo precipitation reactions with sodium hydroxide solution when mixed together to produce a bright blue precipitate of copper (II) hydroxide and a solution of a sodium salt.The chemical equations for the reaction between Copper (II) nitrate and Sodium hydroxide are as follows:Cu(NO3)2 (aq) + 2NaOH (aq) → Cu(OH)2 (s) + 2NaNO3 (aq)Copper II nitrate + sodium hydroxide → copper II hydroxide + sodium nitrate
Answer: Cupric hydroxide (as bluish white precipitate) and sodium nitrate. Cu(NO3)2 + 2NaOH --> Cu(OH)2 + 2NaNO3
Sodium - Na. When silver nitrate is mixed with Sodium Hydroxide, Sodium Iodide, Sodium Phosphate a precipitate forms.
AgNO3 + NaOH = AgOH + NaNO3 The silver hydroxide is an insoluble precipitate but also unstable: 2 AgOH----Ag2O + H2O
A white hydroxide: Ca(OH)2.
Forms a yellow precipitate
They are not soluble, therefore they do not precipitate or form a color....a.k.a....no reaction...
Reaction_of_ferric_chloride_to_sodium_hydroxideBasically: FeCl3 (ferric chloride) + 3NaOH (sodium hydroxide) > Fe(OH)3 + 3NaCl (ferric hydroxide precipitate and sodium chloride, respectively)