Lead (II) azide has the molecular formula of Pb(N3)2. Lead (II) azide has the molecular weight of 291.2 grams per mole.
Alkaline potassium iodide azide is a compound used in analytical chemistry for the colorimetric determination of lead. It is a reagent that reacts with lead to form a yellow color complex, which can be quantified to measure the concentration of lead in a sample. It is important to handle this compound with care due to its toxicity and potential to form explosive compounds.
Lead azide's melting point is 350 C. It would also explode when it reaches this temperature.
There is no boiling point of lead azide, as it would blow up when it reaches its melting and auto-ignition temperature of 350 Celsius
291,23 g/mol
Formula: Pb(N3)2empirical: PbN6
Formula: Pb(N3)2empirical: PbN6
Lead is a metal. It is the 82nd element. It forms the Pb2+ and Pb4+ ions. Azide is a negative ion with the formula N3-. It cannot occur on its own , it needs some positive ion to balance its charge (example the sodium ion Na+ to form sodium azide, NaN3). Compounds with this ion, called azides, are explosive.
George Azide's birth name is Nnamdi Azide.
Azide is a nucleophile.
George Azide is 6' 2".
Sodium azide (NaN3) is a salt composed of sodium (Na+) cations and azide (N3-) anions. The azide anion consists of three nitrogen atoms covalently bonded in a linear arrangement. Sodium azide is commonly used as a source of azide ions in various chemical reactions.
The empirical formula for sodium azide is NaN3.