Silver Nitrate is soluble.
The chloride anion. Silver chloride is a solid that will precipitate out of solution.
The most likely ion present in the water tested with silver nitrate that resulted in a white precipitate is chloride ion (Cl-). This is because silver nitrate reacts with chloride ions to form silver chloride, which appears as a white precipitate.
Yes, this statement is correct. When chlorobenzene reacts with acidified silver nitrate solution, a white precipitate of silver chloride is formed due to the displacement reaction between the chloride ion from chlorobenzene and the silver ion from silver nitrate.
The silver nitrate test provides a negative result on the presence of a chloride ion because silver chloride is insoluble in water and forms a white precipitate when silver ions react with chloride ions. This precipitate masks the presence of the chloride ion in the test solution, giving a negative result.
If the salt solution contains chloride ion (eg. from table salt, NaCl) then silver chloride will precipitate. Both sodium and nitrate ions stay unchanged in solution. Ag+aq + Cl-aq --> AgCls
Chloride - it is an anion and can be tested if white precipitate is formed when silver nitrate and nitrate acid is added to it.
The chloride anion. Silver chloride is a solid that will precipitate out of solution.
Chloride anions form a white precipitate of silver chloride when mixed in solution with silver nitrate.
The most likely ion present in the water tested with silver nitrate that resulted in a white precipitate is chloride ion (Cl-). This is because silver nitrate reacts with chloride ions to form silver chloride, which appears as a white precipitate.
Silver is normally not a cation or an anion, it is an element. Once it becomes an ion however, it will become a CATION with a +1 charge (Ag^+).
Yes, this statement is correct. When chlorobenzene reacts with acidified silver nitrate solution, a white precipitate of silver chloride is formed due to the displacement reaction between the chloride ion from chlorobenzene and the silver ion from silver nitrate.
The silver nitrate test provides a negative result on the presence of a chloride ion because silver chloride is insoluble in water and forms a white precipitate when silver ions react with chloride ions. This precipitate masks the presence of the chloride ion in the test solution, giving a negative result.
If the salt solution contains chloride ion (eg. from table salt, NaCl) then silver chloride will precipitate. Both sodium and nitrate ions stay unchanged in solution. Ag+aq + Cl-aq --> AgCls
An anion IS an ion.
Chloride ions (Cl-) cause a white precipitate (silver chloride) to form when acidified aqueous silver nitrate is added to it.
This ion is an anion.
Silver is normally not a cation or an anion, it is an element. Once it becomes an ion however, it will become a CATION with a +1 charge (Ag^+).