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19 February, 18:37

When silver nitrate (AgNO3) reacts with sodium sulfate (Na2SO4) in aqueous solution, will a precipitate form? If yes, what is the precipitate?

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  1. 19 February, 20:53
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    We know that a double replacement will occur when you combine the two:

    AgNO3 + NaSO4 = AgSO4 (Silver Sulfate) + NaNO3 (Sodium Nitrate)

    The solubility rules state that:

    1) All nitrates are soluble

    2) Sulfates are soluble except for Pb, Ag, Hg+, Ca, Sr, Ba

    So [Silver Sulfate] will produce a precipitate.

    The Net Ionic equation is this:

    Ag (+) + SO4 (2-) = AgSO4 (+)
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