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.
Hydrochloric acid (HCl) is commonly used to dissolve iron quickly due to its strong corrosive properties. It reacts with iron to form iron chloride and hydrogen gas, which leads to the dissolution of the iron material.
When AgNo3 reacts with iodide ions, the precipitate of AgI is formed.AgI is insoluble in HNO3. The symbol of the cation os, I-.
Yes. HNO3 is an electrolyte. In water, it will dissolve into H+ ions and NO3- ions.
Chloride ions form a white precipitate of silver chloride (AgCl) when added to silver nitrate (AgNO3), and this precipitate does not dissolve in nitric acid (HNO3). It is insoluble in HNO3 due to the low solubility of silver chloride in the presence of excess chloride ions.
Yes, HNO3 dissociates in water to form H+ and NO3-. This dissociation process results in the acid's characteristic behavior of releasing hydrogen ions in solution.
Hydrochloric acid (HCl) is commonly used to dissolve iron quickly due to its strong corrosive properties. It reacts with iron to form iron chloride and hydrogen gas, which leads to the dissolution of the iron material.
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-.
Gallium oxide is dissolved in hot nitric acid.
Iron filings do not dissolve in water. They are small pieces of iron that are insoluble in water and will float or sink in water rather than dissolve.
Yes. HNO3 is an electrolyte. In water, it will dissolve into H+ ions and NO3- ions.
Chloride ions form a white precipitate of silver chloride (AgCl) when added to silver nitrate (AgNO3), and this precipitate does not dissolve in nitric acid (HNO3). It is insoluble in HNO3 due to the low solubility of silver chloride in the presence of excess chloride ions.
Yes, HNO3 dissociates in water to form H+ and NO3-. This dissociation process results in the acid's characteristic behavior of releasing hydrogen ions in solution.
The classic solvent is aqua regia: 1 part HNO3 and 3 parts HCl (cocentrated acids).
No, iron filings do not dissolve in vinegar. Vinegar is an acidic solution primarily composed of acetic acid and water, which can react with some metals, but iron filings will remain as solid particles. While vinegar can cause corrosion of iron over time, it does not dissolve the iron itself.
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
1. we dissolve a body fast with acid 2. Because acid is very strong