Zinc nitrate is an amphoteric compound, hence it will react with the reactive metal (calcium).
Zn(NO3)2 + Ca --> Ca(NO3)2 + Zn
The above is a displacement reaction, where the more reactive calcium displaces the less reactive zinc.
2AgNO3 + ZnI2 -> 2AgI + Zn(NO3)2
Equation is Zn + Pb(NO3)2 --> Zn(NO3)2 + Pb
zinc + nitric acid --> zinc nitrate + water and hydrogen I think...
This is a single replacement reaction. Zinc is more reactive than copper, so it replaces it and bonds with sulfate. The balanced equation is Zn + CuSO4 => Cu + ZnSO4 (zinc always has a charge of +2)
Zinc Nitrate + Silver (Displacement Reaction= Zinc is more reactive than Silver)
2AgNO3 + ZnI2 -> 2AgI + Zn(NO3)2
Equation is Zn + Pb(NO3)2 --> Zn(NO3)2 + Pb
P = CqB^2
zinc + nitric acid --> zinc nitrate + water and hydrogen I think...
This is a single replacement reaction. Zinc is more reactive than copper, so it replaces it and bonds with sulfate. The balanced equation is Zn + CuSO4 => Cu + ZnSO4 (zinc always has a charge of +2)
Zinc Nitrate + Silver (Displacement Reaction= Zinc is more reactive than Silver)
The reaction between zinc nitrate and sodium carbonate results in the formation of zinc carbonate, sodium nitrate, and water. The balanced chemical equation for this reaction is: Zn(NO3)2 + Na2CO3 → ZnCO3 + 2NaNO3
The balanced equation for zinc nitrate (Zn(NO3)2) and ferrous sulfate (FeSO4) is: Zn(NO3)2 + FeSO4 -> ZnSO4 + Fe(NO3)2.
The equation is 4 Zn + 10 HNO3 -> 4 Zn(NO3)2 + N2O + 5 H2O.
When calcium reacts with zinc chloride, the balanced chemical equation is: [ \text{Ca} (s) + \text{ZnCl}_2 (aq) \rightarrow \text{CaCl}_2 (aq) + \text{Zn} (s) ] In this reaction, solid calcium displaces zinc from zinc chloride, producing calcium chloride in solution and solid zinc.
Nitric acid plus zinc oxideNitricoxide
Zn(NO3)2 + Na3PO4 yields Zn3(PO4)2 + NaNO3 with zinc phosphate being the precipitate.