No, there would be no reaction present. This is because the particles are more reactive in the zinc then they are in the iron, thus creating no displacement reaction to occur between the metals.
Yes. In metallic zinc is in contact with iron nitrate in solution in water, zinc will displace iron from the solution to form zinc nitrate and metallic iron, because zinc is higher than iron in the Electromotive Series.
I only know 3 metals that react with acids to produce hydrogen. They are Zinc, iron and magnesium. There are 3 acids which react with them: and It will produce hydrogen gas which is the lightest known gas and is flammable :)
Metals such as iron (Fe) and zinc (Zn) commonly form oxides (in combination with oxygen). Iron(II)Oxide is Fe0. Zinc oxide is ZnO.If the question intended to ask "what is formed when they react together" the answer is, they don't form compounds because they are cations (positive ions in an ionic compound).
Magnesium react with water and burn easily in air.
Zinc nitrate ( Zn(NO3)2) has the elements, zinc, nitrogen and oxygen.
some substances need 2 or more, and coating will not give an reaction for example fire and paper will burn ( paper the reactant) and fire and fire will have no precipitate. Therefore, must have to different metals.
There will be some little bubles but nothing else
Magnesium and iron are both more electromotive then zinc, so zinc can't displace them in a compound.
Yes zinc will react to form zinc nitrate and silver.
Yes I did it in lab yesterday.
They could, since magnesium is more reactive than copper, and could displace it to form magnesium nitrate.
Zinc Nitrate
Since magnesium is more strongly metallic (that is, has a lower electronegativity) than zinc, it bondly more strongly to the nitrate radical than zinc does, therefore there would be no reaction between magnesium nitrate and zinc.
no
How the @#$% should I know?!?!
Zinc nitrate dissolved in water.
yup.
These compounds doesn't react.