Keep silver nitrate in brown bottles and/or cover the bottle with aluminium foil. This will prevent the decomposition of silver nitrate from light.
Silver nitrate does not "react" with light, because light is not a substance. Light can catalyze the autodecompositon of silver nitrate.
Silver nitrate is white, but light sensitive, so it turns black
It turns black or dark in colour when silver nitrate is exposed to sunlight.
Silver nitrate is very susceptible to reactions that destroy it, catalyzed by short wavelength light, which is strongly absorbed by brown bottles.
It is tested for silver nitrate sometime. It is tested for silver nitrate sometime. It is tested for silver nitrate sometime.
Silver nitrate does not "react" with light, because light is not a substance. Light can catalyze the autodecompositon of silver nitrate.
Your question firstly isn't stated correctly, but if you are stating what form is silver nitrate decomposed from in light, well it is a liquid.
Silver nitrate is white, but light sensitive, so it turns black
No. However, silver nitrate is photosensitive when moist, and reacts with light, so it might appear to react with water.
It turns black or dark in colour when silver nitrate is exposed to sunlight.
Silver nitrate is a compound. It consists of the metal silver and the compound nitrate. Nitrate consists of nitrogen and oxygen.
how is silver nitrate disposed of
Silver nitrate (AgNO3) is a silver salt.
Silver nitrate is very susceptible to reactions that destroy it, catalyzed by short wavelength light, which is strongly absorbed by brown bottles.
Silver nitrate = AgNO3
It is tested for silver nitrate sometime. It is tested for silver nitrate sometime. It is tested for silver nitrate sometime.
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