No Silver is an element that contains only silver.
In order to be considered organic a substance must be a compound that contains carbon and hydrogen.
No. Silver is an element and is inorganic.
No, a substance must contain carbon and hydrogen to be considered organic.
It stains like hell
all the organic compounds and nitrates of metals and ammonium do not form ppts with silver nitrate.
The silver ion is Ag+ and the perchlorate ion is ClO4-, so silver perchlorate would have the formula of AgClO4.
No. Silver is an element and is inorganic.
no, it is not
No, a substance must contain carbon and hydrogen to be considered organic.
inorganic
None of those are organic compounds. An organic compound is one whose molecules contain carbon. Table Salt: NaCl Water: H2O Silver: Ag Chicken contains organic compounds, but since there isn't a "chicken molecule," I wouldn't consider chicken an organic compound.
hyoliulo
Cu (II) O
It stains like hell
all the organic compounds and nitrates of metals and ammonium do not form ppts with silver nitrate.
Indeed - it is a native metal - an element. It contains no Carbon or other organic material.
The silver ion is Ag+ and the perchlorate ion is ClO4-, so silver perchlorate would have the formula of AgClO4.
Michael Harmata has written: 'Silver in organic chemistry' -- subject(s): Organosilver compounds