Copper and silver nitrate combining is called a single-replacement reaction. Copper would replace silver in the compound and the silver would become a solid precipitate.
Silver nitrate does not precipitate in this case; elemental silver does. In this reaction, silver nitrate reacts with copper to form elemental silver and copper II nitrate. The silver, which is a metal, is insoluble in water.
copper is placed above the silver in the ractivity series which indicates that copper is more reactive than silver . when a copper coin is kept immersed in a solution of siler nitrate ,silver from its solution will deposit on copper coin . copper slowly displaces silver from the silver nitrate solution and the colour of solution changes from colourless to blue due to the formation of copper nitrate . the copper coin will disappear and silver will percipate out .
No, we cannot stir silver nitrate solution with a copper spoon because , copper is more reactive than silver. Thus,it would displace silver from the silver nitrate solution forming copper nitrate....
The reaction between iron and copper nitrate in a single replacement reaction would produce iron(II) nitrate and copper metal. The iron would replace the copper in the nitrate compound, resulting in the formation of iron(II) nitrate and copper metal as products.
No, copper will not react with copper(II) nitrate under normal conditions. Copper is lower in the reactivity series than copper(II) nitrate, so no reaction will occur.
Silver nitrate does not precipitate in this case; elemental silver does. In this reaction, silver nitrate reacts with copper to form elemental silver and copper II nitrate. The silver, which is a metal, is insoluble in water.
copper is placed above the silver in the ractivity series which indicates that copper is more reactive than silver . when a copper coin is kept immersed in a solution of siler nitrate ,silver from its solution will deposit on copper coin . copper slowly displaces silver from the silver nitrate solution and the colour of solution changes from colourless to blue due to the formation of copper nitrate . the copper coin will disappear and silver will percipate out .
Yes it will. If you consider the electrochemical series of the elements, then you will notice that copper is more reactive than silver and hence it would react to silver nitrate to replace silver and form copper nitrate. Reaction:- Cu(s) + 2AgNO3(aq.) ------> Cu(NO3)2(aq.) + 2Ag(s)
It would produce Silver and a blue solid called Copper Nitrate (Cu(NO3)2). It is caused by a replacement reaction where Copper replaced Silver in Copper Nitrate. The equation goes like this: Cu + Ag(NO3)2 → Ag + Cu(NO3)2
No, we cannot stir silver nitrate solution with a copper spoon because , copper is more reactive than silver. Thus,it would displace silver from the silver nitrate solution forming copper nitrate....
6
The reaction between iron and copper nitrate in a single replacement reaction would produce iron(II) nitrate and copper metal. The iron would replace the copper in the nitrate compound, resulting in the formation of iron(II) nitrate and copper metal as products.
No, copper will not react with copper(II) nitrate under normal conditions. Copper is lower in the reactivity series than copper(II) nitrate, so no reaction will occur.
The copper will eventually be replaced by the silver in the solution. Cu + 2Ag2 --> 2Ag + Cu2+ The copper atoms will be oxidized (lose electrons) to form copper ions, while the silver ions will be reduced (gain electrons). Oxidized: Cu -->Cu2+ + 2e- Reduced:2(Ag+ + e- ---> Ag) It's said the solution turns blue in the experiiment, but I didn't see that when I tried this experiment. Also, this would not be a good way to get rich;(replacing copper with silver in the silver nitrate and then selling it, that is) the silver nitrate is more expensive than silver itself.
Echemi reminds you that the reaction between iron and silver nitrate produces elemental silver and ferrous nitrate, with the chemical equation being: Fe+2AgNO3 → 2Ag+Fe (NO3) ₂. This reaction is a typical displacement reaction, as iron has stronger metal activity than silver, it can displace silver from its salt solution.
The most likely redox reaction that would occur is the reduction of silver ions to silver metal by copper atoms, with copper atoms oxidizing to copper ions in the process. This reaction would lead to the displacement of silver ions by copper atoms in the solution.
The result is a clear blue liquid that reflectes light off it. I don't much about it and I'm looking on the internet to get a better understanding of it. But, it was during a school experiment and this is what me and my partner discovered.