The molecular formula for copper(II) nitrate and aluminum are Cu(NO3)2 and Al. The balanced reaction involves 3-moles of Cu(NO3)2 reacting with 2-moles of Al to yield 2-moles of aluminum nitrate Al(NO3)3 and 3-moles of Cu.
No, they will not because their anions are same i.e. Nitrate
The mass of lead(II) nitrate required to react with 370 g NaOH is 1 531,9 g.
In the reaction of lead(II) nitrate with aqueous ammonia, lead(II) ions (Pb²⁺) react with hydroxide ions (OH⁻) formed from ammonia to produce lead(II) hydroxide (Pb(OH)₂), a precipitate. The complete ionic equation is: [ \text{Pb}^{2+}{(aq)} + 2 \text{OH}^-{(aq)} \rightarrow \text{Pb(OH)}2{(s)} ] Ammonia (NH₃) acts as a weak base in this reaction, but it does not appear in the net ionic equation since it is not ionized in the solution.
Zinc is more reactive than Lead nitrate (See Displacement Series). Therefore, Zinc will displace lead in lead nitrate: Zn + Pb(NO3)2 -> Zn(NO3)2 + Pb
This reaction is:2 Al + 3 Pb(NO3)2 = 2 Al(NO3)3 + 3Pb
Lead nitrate and potassium hydroxide react to form lead hydroxide and potassium nitrate. This reaction is a double displacement reaction where the positive ions switch places. Lead hydroxide is insoluble in water and forms a precipitate.
The products will be lead hydroxide and sodium nitrate
If copper II hydroxide and sodium nitrate are heated but not stirred, they may not react completely or efficiently. The reaction between copper II hydroxide and sodium nitrate typically forms copper II nitrate and water. Lack of stirring can lead to uneven distribution of reactants and slower reaction rates.
These compounds doesn't react.
NO. Platinum will not react with lead(II) nitrate because platinum is BELOW lead in the activity series.
NO. Platinum will not react with lead(II) nitrate because platinum is BELOW lead in the activity series.
no
Copper nitrate (Cu(NO3)2) will not react with lead nitrate (Pb(NO3)2), or if they do, no observable change will be noticed, given that both are soluble nitrate salts, i.e. Pb2+(aq) + NO32-(aq) > Pb(NO3)2 (This will also work for copper)
Platinum is a noble metal and typically does not react with most common reagents, including lead nitrate. Lead nitrate is more likely to react with metals lower in the reactivity series than platinum.
No, they will not because their anions are same i.e. Nitrate
No, lead does not react with tin nitrate under normal conditions. Lead is a less reactive metal and is unlikely to displace tin in a compound like tin nitrate.
Silver nitrate and lead nitrate do not react, so there would be no precipitate.