Science, asked by 9807164850, 9 months ago

in which condition do sodium chloride and silver nitrate react? what type of reaction is this.

Answers

Answered by gopinatansunilkumar8
38

Sodium chloride and silver nitrate in dissolved form can react with each other in normal conditions. Both salts are soluble, but the product of their reaction, silver chloride AgCl is a salt that is insoluble in water, which precipitates after reaction in a white curd-like sediment: NaCl + AgNO₃ = NaNO₃ + AgCl.

Answered by Anonymous
2

They act in standard conditions and the reaction is a double displacement reaction.

  • In the case, where both are combined, sodium nitrate and a white silver chloride precipitate are created.
  • This is a twofold displacement reaction in operation. Both must be dissolved in water or another solvent capable of dissociating them into their ions before they may react.
  • For this, at least one chemical must be generated that is not soluble in the solvent.
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