No, silver chloride is a compound, so the terms, metal and nonmetal don't apply to it.
The terms "metal" and "nonmetal" are normally applied to elements, not compounds such as silver bromide.
Silver chloride can be made by combining silver nitrate with sodium chloride. This will result in a white precipitate of silver chloride forming in the solution. Alternatively, silver chloride can also be made by reacting hydrochloric acid with silver nitrate.
it can be nonmetal because it is soluble in water..
Silver(I) chloride, although it is typically just called silver chloride, because +1 is silver's only valence state.
To calculate the mass of silver chloride needed to plate 285mg of pure silver, you can start by determining the mass of silver in the silver chloride. Since silver chloride contains 75.27% silver, the mass of silver in the silver chloride is 0.7527 * mass of silver chloride. Once you have the mass of silver in the silver chloride, you can set up a ratio to find the mass of silver chloride needed to plate 285mg of pure silver.
Metal, 1) its silvery (shiny) and it is a solid, and all metals are solids, with one exceptiuon mercury. Remember that a few metals are not silvery such as copper, gold. And some metals are soft, such as sodium, gallium, indium, potassium.
Chloride is a term used for salts. Chlorine is a chemical element, nonmetallic.
Sodium chloride contains the metal sodium and the non metal chlorine.
Silver is a metal.
The correct name for AgCl is silver chloride. Its IUPAC name is chlorosilver. Other names for silver chloride are cerargyrite, chlorargyrite, and horn silver.
The terms "metal" and "nonmetal" are normally applied to elements, not compounds such as silver bromide.
Silver chloride can be made by combining silver nitrate with sodium chloride. This will result in a white precipitate of silver chloride forming in the solution. Alternatively, silver chloride can also be made by reacting hydrochloric acid with silver nitrate.
Silver(I) chloride, although it is typically just called silver chloride, because +1 is silver's only valence state.
To calculate the mass of silver chloride needed to plate 285mg of pure silver, you can start by determining the mass of silver in the silver chloride. Since silver chloride contains 75.27% silver, the mass of silver in the silver chloride is 0.7527 * mass of silver chloride. Once you have the mass of silver in the silver chloride, you can set up a ratio to find the mass of silver chloride needed to plate 285mg of pure silver.
it can be nonmetal because it is soluble in water..
A white solid called silver chloride is formed when silver nitrate is added to a solution of cobalt chloride. This reaction is a double displacement reaction where the silver ions from silver nitrate replace the chloride ions from cobalt chloride to form the insoluble silver chloride precipitate.
The precipitate formed from silver nitrate and ammonium chloride is silver chloride. This reaction occurs because silver chloride is insoluble in water.