Not that many. It is wonderfully resistant to most stuff, including oxidation in air. That's why it's a good choice for making jewelry. It can be corroded by caustic alkalis, cyanides, halogens and sulfur, and it is soluble in aqua regia. Platinum can act as a catalyst in a number of situations. The most popular one is as the active element in automobile catalytic converters. Wikipedia has additional information, and a link is provided.
NO. Platinum will not react with lead(II) nitrate because platinum is BELOW lead in the activity series.
Metals like gold, platinum, and silver typically do not react with copper sulfate. Additionally, metal compounds that are less reactive than copper, such as zinc oxide or aluminum oxide, will not react with copper sulfate either.
Platinum metals (ruthenium, rhodium, iridium, osmium, palladium and platinum) and gold are very nonreactive metals; they don't react with water but a metal absolutely insensible to oxygen or acids in any conditions doesn't exist.
The Oxygen (O2) and the Sulfur Dioxide (SO2), in the presence of platinum, form sulfur trioxide (SO3) which will react with water (H2O) to produce sulfuric acid (H2SO4).Though the platinum is not used in the reaction, nor is it affected, it is a catalyst required for the reaction to take place.O2 + 2SO2 --> 2SO3SO3 +H2O --> H2SO4
Aluminium is passive towards Nitric acid because Nitric acid forms a protective thin film on surface of Aluminium which protects from further reaction.
Platinum doesn't react with nitric acid.
Platinum does not react with sulfuric acid under normal conditions.
NO. Platinum will not react with lead(II) nitrate because platinum is BELOW lead in the activity series.
NO. Platinum will not react with lead(II) nitrate because platinum is BELOW lead in the activity series.
Yes
Sodium hydroxide solution will not react with platinum or gold. Platinum and gold are noble metals that are resistant to corrosion by most chemicals, including sodium hydroxide.
Platinum is a noble metal and typically does not react with most common reagents, including lead nitrate. Lead nitrate is more likely to react with metals lower in the reactivity series than platinum.
Sodium hydroxide does not react with platinum under normal conditions as platinum is inert to many chemical reagents, including sodium hydroxide. Platinum is often used in chemical processes precisely because of its resistance to corrosion and reactivity.
No, basically it is just like gold and silver as how it reacts with water
Gold, Platinum, Argon, Helium, Krypton, Xenon, etc.
Examples: platinum metals, gold, silver, lead, etc.
The noble gasses, gold and platinum.