It has no color; it's a whitish material, looking something like table salt.
Lead compounds tend to be blue in flame tests
Its Colorless
The nitrate ion imparts no color to a solution.
When lead nitrate is heated, brown nitrogen dioxide gas is evolved, which gives off a yellowish-brown color.
One way to differentiate between lead nitrate and silver nitrate is to add a few drops of dilute hydrochloric acid to each compound. Lead nitrate will produce a white precipitate of lead chloride, while silver nitrate will produce a white precipitate of silver chloride. Another method is to observe the color of the compounds - silver nitrate is white, while lead nitrate is colorless.
Lead compounds tend to be blue in flame tests
Its Colorless
Lead nitrate has no color. It's a whitish crystal; in solution it looks just like water.
Lead nitrate is colorless, as are zinc ions. So it doesn't "turn into" any color.
white powder and colourless crystals.
The nitrate ion imparts no color to a solution.
When lead nitrate is heated, brown nitrogen dioxide gas is evolved, which gives off a yellowish-brown color.
Its Colorless
Lead(II) nitrate, chemical formula Pb(NO3)2.It commonly occurs as a colourless crystal or white powder and is soluble in water giving a clear, colorless solution.
It depends on the conentration, did a test today with several nitrates (incl. lead nitrate) and they were all yellow/orange...
A redox reaction will occur, with copper displacing lead from the lead nitrate solution to form copper nitrate and lead. The copper will turn into a reddish-brown color due to the formation of copper ions in the solution.
yellow