If the silver nitrate is in aqueous solution and the copper is solid in contact with the solution of silver nitrate, copper atoms will dissolve as ions from the surface of the copper and be replaced by silver atoms formed from the silver ions in solution. This reaction will continue until the entire surface of the copper in contact with the solution is covered with silver. The chemical driving force for this reaction is displacement of one element from its compounds by another element that is higher in the electromotive series than the element displaced.
When copper reacts with silver nitrate, there is a displacement reaction where the copper displaces silver from the silver nitrate solution. This results in the formation of copper(II) nitrate solution and solid silver. The reaction is a single displacement reaction where copper is more reactive than silver.
When copper is added to silver nitrate, a single displacement reaction occurs. The copper will displace the silver in the compound, forming copper(II) nitrate and silver. The silver will precipitate out of solution as a solid.
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.
It would produce Silver and a blue solid called Copper Nitrate (Cu(NO3)2). It is caused by a replacement reaction where Copper replaced Silver in Copper Nitrate. The equation goes like this: Cu + Ag(NO3)2 → Ag + Cu(NO3)2
A displacement reaction, in which the copper dissolves to form copper nitrate and replaces silver ions in the original silver nitrate, reducing the silver ions to metallic silver.
No, hydrogen gas is not produced when copper reacts with silver nitrate. In this reaction, copper replaces silver in the silver nitrate solution, resulting in the formation of copper(II) nitrate and silver metal.
Copper reacts with silver nitrate solution to form silver metal, copper(II) nitrate, and nitric oxide gas. This reaction is a displacement reaction where copper displaces silver from the silver nitrate solution because copper is higher in the activity series than silver.
By dissolving the silver nitrate in water, then stirring finely divided copper into the water. The copper will displace silver from the silver nitrate as a solid and form copper nitrate in the solution.
Silver nitrate does not precipitate in this case; elemental silver does. In this reaction, silver nitrate reacts with copper to form elemental silver and copper II nitrate. The silver, which is a metal, is insoluble in water.
copper nitrate and silver chloride Copper chloride reacts with silver nitrate to form copper nitrate and silver chloride. There are two types of copper chloride compounds. One is copper(I) chloride with the unit formula CuCl, and the other is copper(II) chloride with the unit formula CuCl2. The following are the two chemical equations for the two possible chemical reactions. CuCl + AgNO3 --> CuNO3 + AgCl CuCl2 + AgNO3 --> Cu(NO3)2 + AgCl
When copper reacts with silver nitrate, there is a displacement reaction where the copper displaces silver from the silver nitrate solution. This results in the formation of copper(II) nitrate solution and solid silver. The reaction is a single displacement reaction where copper is more reactive than silver.
If a copper coin is dipped in silver nitrate solution for hours or days, the solution will likely turn blue due to the formation of copper(II) nitrate. This reaction occurs as copper from the coin reacts with the silver nitrate in the solution.
When copper (II) sulfate reacts with silver nitrate, a white precipitate of silver sulfate is formed. Copper (II) ions from copper (II) sulfate react with nitrate ions from silver nitrate to form a soluble salt.
When silver nitrate is added to copper, a redox reaction occurs where the Cu from copper displaces the Ag from silver nitrate. This results in the formation of copper nitrate and silver metal as a solid precipitate.
no silver is an element nitrogen is an element silver nitrate is a compound
copper will replace silver in silver nitratesolution will precipitate silver and oxidize copper turning to copper nitrate
No, copper will not displace silver from silver nitrate and silver will not displace copper from copper nitrate. This is because the reactivity series dictates that silver is below copper, so copper can displace silver but not vice versa.