The flame color would be green.
Aluminum nitrate does not produce a specific flame color when burned. The flame color produced by a compound is typically due to the metal ion present, rather than the nitrate anion. Aluminum itself does not produce a significant color in flames.
Cupric sulfate produces a blue-green flame color when burned.
Lead compounds tend to be blue in flame tests
Selenium nitrate typically gives a pink or reddish flame color when subjected to a flame test.
The flame of barium nitrate typically produces a pale green color when burned. This green color is a characteristic flame test color for barium compounds.
Aluminum nitrate does not produce a specific flame color when burned. The flame color produced by a compound is typically due to the metal ion present, rather than the nitrate anion. Aluminum itself does not produce a significant color in flames.
Cupric sulfate produces a blue-green flame color when burned.
Cupric sulfate burns with a green flame.
Silver nitrate does not produce a flame color on its own. When silver nitrate is burned, it decomposes into silver metal, nitrogen dioxide gas, and oxygen, but it does not emit a characteristic flame color.
The flame of strontium nitrate is red. It produces a bright red color when ignited.
Lead compounds tend to be blue in flame tests
Cupric nitrate burns green because copper ions emit a green flame when they are heated. This phenomenon is due to the excitation and subsequent de-excitation of electrons in the copper atoms, producing green light.
Selenium nitrate typically gives a pink or reddish flame color when subjected to a flame test.
It depends on the conentration, did a test today with several nitrates (incl. lead nitrate) and they were all yellow/orange...
Iron nitrate typically produces a yellow-orange flame color when it is heated. This color is due to the presence of iron ions in the compound.
The flame of barium nitrate typically produces a pale green color when burned. This green color is a characteristic flame test color for barium compounds.
In a flame test , the sodium ion will produce a bright yellow flame. The nitrate ion does not produce a colour. Dissolve sodium nitrate in water. Then using a ni-chrome wire, clean it in hydrochloric acid, dip the clean wire intoi the solution. Then pass the wire through a bunsen flame. The pale blue flame, will become bright yellow. Different metal ions produce different flame colours. Lithium = red Potassium = lilac Copper = Blue/green