The reaction is:
Hg2(NO3)2 + 2 LiCl = 2 LiNO3 + Hg2Cl2
ag+hg gives aghg
Sodium chloride is NaCl. Mercourous nitrate is Hg2(NO3)2. The product of the reaction between these two compounds is Hg2Cl2, an insoluble salt.
Mercury could be reacted with Nitric acid to form Mercurous nitrate. Since hydrogen is less reactive than mercury, therefore mercury would not replace hydrogen from nitric acid but the nitrate ion could oxidize mercury ion and form mercurous chloride .
Lithium and nitrate don't react. Only ... ... are precipitating to solid. (SO42-)aq + (Ba2+)aq --> (BaSO4)s
s + p =
LiI(aq) + AgNO3(aq) --> AgI(s) + LiNO3(aq)
Any reaction occur between these two compounds.
Im not quite sure, but since potassium chloride and ammonium nitrate forms kno3, theoretically, sodium chloride and ammonium nitrate would form sodium nitrate. (Im not 100% sure due to that sodium chloride is more soluble than potassium chloride.)
ag+hg gives aghg
HgNO3: mercurous nitrate is the earlier name for mercury (I) nitrate.
Sodium chloride is NaCl. Mercourous nitrate is Hg2(NO3)2. The product of the reaction between these two compounds is Hg2Cl2, an insoluble salt.
Mercury could be reacted with Nitric acid to form Mercurous nitrate. Since hydrogen is less reactive than mercury, therefore mercury would not replace hydrogen from nitric acid but the nitrate ion could oxidize mercury ion and form mercurous chloride .
Sodium chloride and and sodium nitrate doesn't react.
I think that there is no reaction, both of them are soluble. so they stay as the ions and cations in aqueous.
Essentially ALL the metallic nitrates are soluble, even mercurous nitrate, perhaps the only mercurous salt that is soluble.
Lithium and nitrate don't react. Only ... ... are precipitating to solid. (SO42-)aq + (Ba2+)aq --> (BaSO4)s
s + p =