No, it will not as Ag(Silver) is low in reactivity than Zn(Zinc)
The chemical formula of zinc carbonate is ZnCO3.
ZnCO3
Type ..ZnCO3 (s) + H2SO4 (aq) ---->ZnSO4 (aq) + H2O (l)+CO2 (g) the law is carbonate + acid ---> Salt + water + carbon dioxide
The balanced chemical equation for the reaction between Al2(CO3)3 and ZnCl2 to form ZnCO3 and AlCl3 is: Al2(CO3)3 + 3 ZnCl2 → 3 ZnCO3 + 2 AlCl3
ZnCO3 Zinc,Carbon and Oxygen
hahhaa... your momm(;
The chemical formula of zinc carbonate is ZnCO3.
2Na + ZnCO3 = Zn + Na2CO3
Formula: ZnCO3
ZnCO3
Zinc carbonate is a scientific name.
yes and it will form Zinc Carbonate + Sodium Chloride
No, silver (Ag) will not react with cobalt(II) bromide (CoBr2) under normal conditions because silver is less reactive than cobalt. Silver is a noble metal and is typically unreactive towards most other elements.
Ag is Silver and Fluorine is F. Together they react to form Silver Fluoride. Ag + F ----->AgF
ZnCO3
Silver (Ag) does not react with water (H2O) under normal conditions because silver is relatively unreactive. However, silver can react with water containing dissolved oxygen or other reactive substances to form silver oxide compounds.
Of course; the reaction is: Ag+ + NO-3 + Na+ + Cl- = Na+ + NO-3 + AgCl Silver chloride is a white precipitate, very insoluble in water.