Chemistry, asked by crankywarden1227, 1 year ago

Why does a more reactive metal displace the less reactive metal in single displacement reaction

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
1
Hi guys ☺,
------------------------------------------------------
(this answer helps me to forget you Ayushi)
------------------------------------------------------
Here is your answer,
Thus happens because the ions of more reactive metal don't want to place less reactive metal from its salt solution.
................................................................................
(ignore my grammatical mistakes...)
hope it helps... comment on it...if you like Mark it brainlest for earning free 3 points.
Answered by lohitjinaga
2

Answer:

A displacement reaction happens when a more reactive metal (one that forms positive ions more easily) displaces a less reactive metal from a compound. Example: Magnesium is more reactive than copper, so magnesium can displace copper from a copper sulfate solution to create magnesium sulfate

Similar questions