No,If Ca2+ is bonded to an anion which forms more stable compound with Ca2+ than that of NO3- ,then that anion will replace Ca2+ and the the reaction will occur between CaNO3 and That compound of Ca2+.
hmmm, are you sure? this could be related to the properties of calcium and not just a normal reaction. aluminum nitrate and aluminum react very violently. granted this could be due to the reducing effect of aluminum, but its essentially the same thing..
No. copper has a lower oxidation level than calcium.
Potassium comes before Cu in the Reactivity series so the answer is No.
Yes because calcium is higher in the reactivity series than copper
Yes.
No.
no
Displacement reaction React Copper Nitrate with a more reactive metal such as Sodium or Calcium and you will get Sodium or Calcium Nitrate + Copper and Hydrogen x
Copper nitrate dissolves in water, hence it is a chemical reaction.
There should not be a reaction being that usually elements do not react with their nitrates. But if the calcium nitrate solution was acqueous (water), the calcium will react with the water and as I found in my class, turned black and appeared to react. It does not react with the nitrate but the solution's water.
calcium nitrate crystals
By dissolving the silver nitrate in water, then stirring finely divided copper into the water. The copper will displace silver from the silver nitrate as a solid and form copper nitrate in the solution.
Displacement reaction React Copper Nitrate with a more reactive metal such as Sodium or Calcium and you will get Sodium or Calcium Nitrate + Copper and Hydrogen x
francium ceasium Potassium Sodium Lithium These metals could react with calcium nitrate in a displacement reaction as they are more reactive. e.g. pottasium + calcium nitrate -> calcium + pottasium nitrate.
Calcium nitrate don't react with metals; a possible reaction is with the water from the solution.
It doesn't.
They could, since magnesium is more reactive than copper, and could displace it to form magnesium nitrate.
copper (thiocyanate)2 and potassium nitrate
Copper nitrate dissolves in water, hence it is a chemical reaction.
There should not be a reaction being that usually elements do not react with their nitrates. But if the calcium nitrate solution was acqueous (water), the calcium will react with the water and as I found in my class, turned black and appeared to react. It does not react with the nitrate but the solution's water.
no
how to mack copper sulphate,magnesium sulphate,potasasium cloride,potassium nitrate,iron chloride,calcium chloride,calcium suphate,calcium nitrate,copper nitrate,sodium nitrate,magnesium chloride,aluminum nitrate,siler nitrate. in a formula
calcium nitrate crystals
No they will not, as manganese is less reactive than calcium.