no for ferrous sulphate is less reactive than silver nitrate
Suspend a copper wire in a solution of silver nitrate. Over the course of a few hours the silver nitrate will convert to copper II nitrate, turning the solution blue. Elemental silver will precipitate.
Silver is slightly more reactive than gold, although they are both very unreactive. Assuming that the gold nitrate exists, because it would be very rare, silver would react with it and displace it. The products formed will be silver nitrate and gold.
the silver is displaced out of the compound because the copper is more reactive. It becomes copper nitrate.
A solution The nitrate ( and to some extent the sulphate)is the only common silver salt that is soluble in water. The cloride, bromide and iodide are all insoluble and so a mixture of these with water is a suspension. A solution The nitrate ( and to some extent the sulphate)is the only common silver salt that is soluble in water. The cloride, bromide and iodide are all insoluble and so a mixture of these with water is a suspension.
In certain reaction conditions, yes. Copper is more reactive than silver, so it should react with the nitrate molecule to form copper nitrate while precipitating the silver. *Are you thinking about separating silver from photographic fixer? Commonly a less expensive metal is used like iron (steel wool) to extract much of the silver.
Zinc Nitrate + Silver (Displacement Reaction= Zinc is more reactive than Silver)
Suspend a copper wire in a solution of silver nitrate. Over the course of a few hours the silver nitrate will convert to copper II nitrate, turning the solution blue. Elemental silver will precipitate.
As copper is more reactive than silver copper will displace silver and will become copper nitrate and silver is left by its own from the reaction
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....
No silver cannot react. It is less reactive than potassium
No, copper replaces silver because it is more reactive than silver, and therefore more stable in a compound.
It gives green color . Copper is more reactive than silver therefore it displaces silver from silver nitrate and forms silver + copper nitrate
chloride and sulphate ions give white precipitate with silver ion in aqueous solution but sulphate gives slightly dirty white.
No. Iron is a more reactive metal than silver, so the iron will replace the silver in the silver nitrate solution, forming an iron nitrate solution and solid silver. Eventually, the iron container will be gone, its atoms having gone into the iron nitrate solution.
RbI + AgNO3 ---> RbNO3 + AgI It is displacement reaction. Rubidium is an alkali metal hence it is highly reactive and easily displaces silver from silver nitrate solution.
nothing will happen as copper is more reactive than silver.
Silver is non-ferrous. Ferrous is a term refering to the presence of iron, so silver can only be ferrous if it were a silver-iron alloy.