(NH4)3 2PO4 + 3Ba (OH)2 = 3NH4 2OH + Ba3 (PO4)2
When barium ion is added to a hydroxide ion, the two opposite charges attract each other to form barium hydroxide Ba2+ + OH------>Ba(OH)2.
penis
(NH4)3PO4+AlCl3------->3NH4Cl+AlPO4
3Ca(NO3)2(aq) + 2(NH4)3PO4(aq) ---> 6NH4NO3(aq) + Ca3(PO4)2(s) Aqueous calcium nitrate plus aqueous ammonium phosphate produces aqueous ammonium nitrate plus solid calcium phosphate. This is a double replacement reaction.
Yes. 2HCl + Ba(OH)2 --> BaCl2 + 2H2O
2(NH4)3PO4 + 3Ba(OH)2 --> 6NH4OH + Ba3(PO4)2
When barium ion is added to a hydroxide ion, the two opposite charges attract each other to form barium hydroxide Ba2+ + OH------>Ba(OH)2.
water
penis
A reaction doesn't occur.
(NH4)3PO4+AlCl3------->3NH4Cl+AlPO4
3Ca(NO3)2(aq) + 2(NH4)3PO4(aq) ---> 6NH4NO3(aq) + Ca3(PO4)2(s) Aqueous calcium nitrate plus aqueous ammonium phosphate produces aqueous ammonium nitrate plus solid calcium phosphate. This is a double replacement reaction.
Yes. 2HCl + Ba(OH)2 --> BaCl2 + 2H2O
Laboratory preparation of ammonia or NH3 requires using ammonium chloride and calcium hydroxide. The reaction equation is 2NH4Cl plus CaOH2 gives the products 2NH3 plus CaCl2 plus 2H2O. The ammonium chloride and calcium hydroxide are heated for this reaction.
No. It is a chemical change (chemical reaction) in which the products are different from the reactants. The balanced chemical equation is Cu(NO3)2+2NH4OH-->Cu(OH)2+2NH4NO3, which means one mole of copper(II) nitrate plus two moles of ammonium hydroxide produce one mole of copper(II) hydroxide plus two moles of ammonium nitrate.
BaO + H2O --> Ba(OH)2 barium hydroxide (water of baryte)
it is potassium hydroxide plus calium equals potassium calcium n