This depends on:
- concentration of nitric acid
- stirring
- temperature
- pressure
- ratio iron/acid in the beaker
- the physical form of iron: powder, granules, chips, etc.
I think, concentrated Nitric acid (HNO3)
Yes. The reaction is fast and exothermic. The equation is NaOH + HNO3 --> H2O + NaNO3
Yes. HNO3 is an electrolyte. In water, it will dissolve into H+ ions and NO3- ions.
Nitric acid(HNO3)
When AgNo3 reacts with iodide ions, the precipitate of AgI is formed.AgI is insoluble in HNO3. The symbol of the cation os, I-.
I think, concentrated Nitric acid (HNO3)
Yes. The reaction is fast and exothermic. The equation is NaOH + HNO3 --> H2O + NaNO3
HNO3
Yes. HNO3 is an electrolyte. In water, it will dissolve into H+ ions and NO3- ions.
Gallium oxide is dissolved in hot nitric acid.
Nitric acid(HNO3)
Molarity = moles of solute/Liters of solution ( get moles of HNO3 and 300 ml = 0.300 Liters ) 0.31 grams Nitric acid (1 mole HNO3/63.018 grams) = 0.004919 moles HNO3 Molarity = 0.004919 moles HNO3/0.300 Liters = 0.0164 M HNO3
When AgNo3 reacts with iodide ions, the precipitate of AgI is formed.AgI is insoluble in HNO3. The symbol of the cation os, I-.
HCL or H2SO4 will dissolve iron and not gold, platinum or palladium
Iron is not soluble in water.
You would dissolve 1 part HNO3 into 99 parts of your solvent.
The classic solvent is aqua regia: 1 part HNO3 and 3 parts HCl (cocentrated acids).