black-gray color of the liquid produced by the silver deposition
Fe(s) + 3AgNO3 ==> Fe(NO3)3 + 3Ag(s)
Iron (II) sulfate is the correct name for this compound. The Fe ion has a charge of 2 and so does the sulfate ion, so there is no subscript after them.
Iron(II) sulfate. Or the older formula name, Ferrous sulfate.
Fe(SO4)3 is Iron(III) sulfate Wrong: Fe2(SO4)3 is iron(III) sulfate.
Barium nitrate + Iron = [No reaction] Ba(NO3)2 + Fe = [No reaction]
No. Iron is a more reactive metal than silver, so the iron will replace the silver in the silver nitrate solution, forming an iron nitrate solution and solid silver. Eventually, the iron container will be gone, its atoms having gone into the iron nitrate solution.
iron nitric + silver
YES.
69
meep
as silver nitrate reacts with iron(AgNO3+Fe gives FeNO3+Ag)(decomposition reaction).
Sodium Nitrate is NaNO3 Iron sulfate (I am assuming that you are referring to iron (ii)) is FeSO4 2 NaNO3 + 1 FeSO4 --> 1 Na2SO4 + 1 Fe(NO3)2 This is a double replacement reaction, and it occurs because Fe(NO3)2 is a precipitate.
Silver is slightly more reactive than gold, although they are both very unreactive. Assuming that the gold nitrate exists, because it would be very rare, silver would react with it and displace it. The products formed will be silver nitrate and gold.
sulfuric acid. Dilute sulfuric acid will react with both lead and ferrous nitrate when dissolved in water producing-: nitric acid, ferrous and lead sulfate. Ferrous sulfate is very soluble in water and lead sulfate is only slightly soluble and so the lead sulfate should pretty much precipitate out of the solution. This method will not completely separate the lead from the iron; however, Its a start. And also you can keep boiling down the solution of the 2 salts until pretty much most of the lead sulfate is separated from the iron sulfate. But if it were me , because of the poisonous nature of lead compounds, I would not want to use this as a source of iron.
Silver Chloride (AgCl) is the precipitate in this reaction.
Fe + CuSO4 --> FeSO4 + Cu Iron + Copper (II) Sulfate yields Iron (II) Sulfate and Copper
The chemical equation is:Fe + 2 AgNO3 = Fe(NO3)2 + 2 Ag