<span>No, I believe this is not an example of a chemical reaction.
What we actually see here is a physical change of the solution. Since we are adding
more water to an aqueous solution which is also made up mostly of water, what
we are simply basically doing is dilution. Since the solution is being diluted,
so definitely the color turned lighter.</span>
Answer:
All three are present
Explanation:
Addition of 6 M HCl would form precipitates of all the three cations, since the chlorides of these cations are insoluble:
.
- Firstly, the solid produced is partially soluble in hot water. Remember that out of all the three solids, lead(II) choride is the most soluble. It would easily completely dissolve in hot water. This is how we separate it from the remaining precipitate. Therefore, we know that we have lead(II) cations present, as the two remaining chlorides are insoluble even at high temperatures.
- Secondly, addition of liquid ammonia would form a precipitate with silver:
; Silver hydroxide at higher temperatures decomposes into black silver oxide:
. - Thirdly, we also know we have
in the mixture, since addition of potassium chromate produces a yellow precipitate:
. The latter precipitate is yellow.
I am pretty sure it is white white liquid but if I’m not right I am so sorry
Answer:
The correct option is: provide a source of counterions to prevent the build-up of charge at both the cathode to the anode.
Explanation:
A salt bridge is a U-shaped glass tube that is used in a voltaic cell or galvanic cell to connect the oxidation and reduction half-cells and complete the electric circuit.
<em>It allows the ions to pass through it, thus preventing the accumulation of charge on the anode and cathode as the chemical reaction proceeds.</em>
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Therefore, the correct option is: <u>provide a source of counterions to prevent the build-up of charge at both the cathode to the anode.</u>