HNO3 + H2O ---> (H3O)+ + (NO3)-
Only thing i dont remember is if the arrow is double (<-->).
If the acid is potent then the arrow is single.
But i think in this case it is potent.
Zinc and Nitric acid react to produce Zinc nitrate, Water and Nitrogen Mono Oxide if the Nitric acid is Dilute... 3Zn + 8HNO3 = 3Zn[No3]2 + 4H20 + 2NO
Zn + 2HCl --> ZnCl2 + H2
The equation is 4 Zn + 10 HNO3 -> 4 Zn(NO3)2 + N2O + 5 H2O.
Nitric acid plus zinc oxideNitricoxide
The reduction half-reaction for this reaction is: Zn^2+ + 2e- -> Zn(s).
The chemical reaction is:ZnO + 2 HNO3 = Zn(NO3)2 + H2Adding more HNO3 has no effect.
Zinc and Nitric acid react to produce Zinc nitrate, Water and Nitrogen Mono Oxide if the Nitric acid is Dilute... 3Zn + 8HNO3 = 3Zn[No3]2 + 4H20 + 2NO
Zn + 2HCl --> ZnCl2 + H2
The equation is 4 Zn + 10 HNO3 -> 4 Zn(NO3)2 + N2O + 5 H2O.
The chemical equation (with dilute acid) is:Zn + HNO3 = Zn(NO3)2 +NO +H2O.
Nitric acid plus zinc oxideNitricoxide
The reduction half-reaction for this reaction is: Zn^2+ + 2e- -> Zn(s).
no it is a direct combination reaction
no reaction because Cu is below Zn at electrochemical series ,so Cu can't take Zn away from its salts
The equation is: Zn + 2HNO3 -----> Zn(NO3)2 + H2
The reaction "Zn (s) + 2HCl (aq) -- H2 (g) + ZnCl2 (s)" is not a double-displacement reaction. It is a single displacement reaction where Zn displaces H from HCl to form ZnCl2 and H2 gas.
The reaction equation between Zn^2+ and EDTA is: Zn^2+ + EDTA → Zn(EDTA)^2-