Silver chloride is not an acid, but is an ionically bonded salt.
When hydrochloric acid is added to silver nitrate, a white precipitate of silver chloride forms due to the reaction between the chloride ions in hydrochloric acid and the silver ions in silver nitrate. The balanced equation is: HCl + AgNO3 -> AgCl + HNO3.
4Ag + 4HCl + O2---------4 AgCl + 2 H2O The reaction between silver and hydrochloric acid is possible only in the presence of air and is a slow reaction; the silver chloride in insoluble.
When hydrochloric acid is added to diamminesilver chloride, the diamminesilver chloride will dissociate into silver chloride and ammonia gas. The reaction is represented by the equation: [Agi(NH3)2] + 2HCl → AgCl + 2NH3.
The equation for the reaction between silver nitrate (AG) and hydrochloric acid (HCl) is: AgNO3 + HCl → AgCl + HNO3. This reaction forms silver chloride (AgCl) and nitric acid (HNO3) as products.
What is it you are asking? Are you asking what all those compounds have in common? Well, they have chlorine in them. Are you asking to sort them according to their energies of ionization? or solubility? Please be more specific.
When hydrochloric acid is added to silver nitrate, a white precipitate of silver chloride forms due to the reaction between the chloride ions in hydrochloric acid and the silver ions in silver nitrate. The balanced equation is: HCl + AgNO3 -> AgCl + HNO3.
- the salt AgCl2 doesn't exist - the formic acid doesn't react with AgCl
4Ag + 4HCl + O2---------4 AgCl + 2 H2O The reaction between silver and hydrochloric acid is possible only in the presence of air and is a slow reaction; the silver chloride in insoluble.
When hydrochloric acid is added to diamminesilver chloride, the diamminesilver chloride will dissociate into silver chloride and ammonia gas. The reaction is represented by the equation: [Agi(NH3)2] + 2HCl → AgCl + 2NH3.
The equation for the reaction between silver nitrate (AG) and hydrochloric acid (HCl) is: AgNO3 + HCl → AgCl + HNO3. This reaction forms silver chloride (AgCl) and nitric acid (HNO3) as products.
What is it you are asking? Are you asking what all those compounds have in common? Well, they have chlorine in them. Are you asking to sort them according to their energies of ionization? or solubility? Please be more specific.
Strong
i thing strong acid
Yes, hydrochloric acid is a strong acid.
It is a strong acid.Actually it is very strong.
YES!!! AgCl forms a WHITE ppt. It is one of the Classic Tests for halogens. AgF = No ppt. AgCl = white ppt. AgBr = cream/pale yellow ppt AgI = strong yellow ppt. AgAs = Not chracterised.
Sulfuric acid is one strong acid!