No. Silver is a metallic element, though it can form silver sulfate.
Silver sulfate (Ag2SO4) exists as a white crystalline solid at room temperature. It is poorly soluble in water and decomposes upon heating. Silver sulfate is an ionic compound composed of silver ions (Ag+) and sulfate ions (SO4 2-).
Primarily, it is white, but silver sulfate has been observed to decompose by light to a violet color.
A white precipitate of silver sulfate (Ag2SO4) is formed when magnesium sulfate (MgSO4) reacts with silver nitrate (AgNO3) due to the insolubility of silver sulfate in water.
white or violet
Silver sulfate solution typically appears colorless.
No. Silver is a metallic element, though it can form silver sulfate.
Silver sulfate (Ag2SO4) exists as a white crystalline solid at room temperature. It is poorly soluble in water and decomposes upon heating. Silver sulfate is an ionic compound composed of silver ions (Ag+) and sulfate ions (SO4 2-).
Chemical formula of silver sulfate: Ag2SO4
Primarily, it is white, but silver sulfate has been observed to decompose by light to a violet color.
A white precipitate of silver sulfate (Ag2SO4) is formed when magnesium sulfate (MgSO4) reacts with silver nitrate (AgNO3) due to the insolubility of silver sulfate in water.
white or violet
Silver sulfate solution typically appears colorless.
Yes, silver sulfate is slightly soluble in water.
it can be nonmetal because it is soluble in water..
The product is silver sulfate, low soluble in water.
The formula for silver sulfate is Ag2SO4. It consists of two silver ions (Ag+) and one sulfate ion (SO4^2-).
Hydrated sodium, sulfate, silver, and nitrate ions. (The ions already exist in the sodium sulfate and silver nitrate solids, but may not be hydrated there.) since silver sulfate is not very soluble in water, most of the silver and sulfate ions will be removed from the water as solid precipitate, but some hydrated ions will remain in solution.