The color of lithium in the flame test is red.
Lithium nitrate emits an extreme hot pink color.
Red
Purple
Lithium nitrate and lithium chloride flame tests produce the same color because it is the lithium electrons that are raised to a higher energy level and then drop back down to their ground state. Any ionic compound containing lithium will give the same results. Flame tests are used to show the color and spectrum of the element as its electrons are raised to a higher energy level and then fall back to their ground state.
Silver nitrate doesn't burn.
LiNO3
weak
Lithium Nitrate
the answer is really lithium nitrate. nitrate mixed with lithium an alkaline metal element.
A pink color from the spectral lines of lithium.
Li3N would be lithium nitride. LiNO3 would be lithium nitrate. LiN3 does not exist.
Purple
Red
The formula [not "symbol!] for lithium nitrate is LiNO3.
The compound name for lithium nitrate is written LiNO3.
Lithium nitrate and lithium chloride flame tests produce the same color because it is the lithium electrons that are raised to a higher energy level and then drop back down to their ground state. Any ionic compound containing lithium will give the same results. Flame tests are used to show the color and spectrum of the element as its electrons are raised to a higher energy level and then fall back to their ground state.
Nitric acid can be used to make lithium nitrate.
Lithium, Nitrogen, Oxygen
Lithium compounds such as lithium nitrite produce a strong red when heated strongly in a Bunsen burner. You can see this by searching for lithium flame colour on youtube.com.You can see its spectrum on wikipedia.