Sunday, April 21, 2013

Reaction of hydrogen halide with silver nitrate


Question: which of the following hydrogen halide reacts with silver nitrate (aq.) to give a precipitate that dissolves in Na2S2O3 (aq.)?
a)      HCl
b)      HF
c)       HBr
d)      H I

Solution: When silver nitrate (AgNO3(aq)) reacts with hydrogen halde (HX), a double replacement reaction takes place:

A double replacement reaction is a chemical reaction where two reactant ionic compounds exchange ions to form two new product compounds with the same ions.











where X = Cl, Br, or I.

The silver of silver nitrate reacts quickly with hydrogen halide to produce silver halides which are insoluble so they form a precipitate. Except F all other halides (Cl, Br, I) give precipitate with Ag.

AgF is soluble; no precipitate formed
AgCl forms a white precipitate
AgBr forms a cream precipitate
AgI forms a yellow precipitate
This precipitate dissolves on reaction with Na2S2O3 (aq.)
Thus options a, c, d are correct and give precipitate with silver nitrate which dissolve in Na2S2O3 (aq.).

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