Generally they do not show any reaction.
Yes, calcium chloride and potassium iodide can react with each other to form calcium iodide and potassium chloride. This reaction results in the exchange of ions between the two compounds.
Yes, liquid bromine can react with potassium iodide to form potassium bromide and elemental iodine. This reaction is a displacement reaction, where the more reactive element (bromine) displaces the less reactive element (iodine).
Rubidium metal would react with iodine to make rubidium iodide , according to the equation: 2 Ru + I2 -> 2 RuI
Bromine and Potassium iodide react to form Potassium bromide and Iodine.
When ammonium iodide is added to water, it will dissociate into ammonium ions (NH4+) and iodide ions (I-). This results in a colorless solution that may produce an ammonia odor due to the presence of ammonium ions.
No, they do not
There should be Silver nitrate dissolved in the water, only then it can react
Yes
The Molisch test detects carbohydrates by breaking them down to monosaccharides. Disaccharides need to be hydrolyzed into their constituent monosaccharides before they can react with the Molisch reagent, which makes the test slower compared to monosaccharides that can react directly.
Yes, calcium chloride and potassium iodide can react with each other to form calcium iodide and potassium chloride. This reaction results in the exchange of ions between the two compounds.
When potassium iodide and lead nitrate react, lead iodide precipitate forms due to the low solubility of lead iodide in water. This reaction is a double displacement reaction where the potassium and lead ions switch partners, resulting in the formation of the insoluble lead iodide.
When potassium and iodine react, they form potassium iodide. The ions involved are K+ (potassium ion) and I- (iodide ion).
Yes, fluorine water (HF) would react with potassium iodide (KI) to form potassium fluoride (KF) and hydrogen iodide (HI). This reaction would typically release iodine gas as a product.
Yes. Aluminum will replace the iron in the iron iodide in a single replacement reaction. The chemical equation is Al(s) + FeI2(aq) --> Fe(s) + AlI3(aq).
The weight will approximately be 950 grams. YOUR WELCOME.
Yes, liquid bromine can react with potassium iodide to form potassium bromide and elemental iodine. This reaction is a displacement reaction, where the more reactive element (bromine) displaces the less reactive element (iodine).
Silver iodide (AgI), a precipitate insoluble in water, don't react with potassium nitrate.