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Quick question (1 Viewer)

LaCe

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to clarify: Sodium (Na+) is soluble in just about anything rioght? Only way to show its prescence is through flame test - yellow colour indicates this. There must be an anion to form a precipitate with this... i dunno.

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IcEy

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Yeah, I think you're right there. All sodium salts are solutble in water. You don't usually test for sodium in water, because there's nothing wrong with them - they don't do anything bad. Usually, you'd test for Ba, Ca, Mg, Fe II, Fe III, and something else...

Hope it helps.
 

LaCe

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And what about NO3- anions? can they be tested using precipitate reactions?

All group one cations are soluble basically, from what i have read, some exceptions maybe but look at solubility charts.
 

Dreamerish*~

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LaCe said:
And what about NO3- anions? can they be tested using precipitate reactions?

All group one cations are soluble basically, from what i have read, some exceptions maybe but look at solubility charts.
I love NO3. It's soluble in everything.
 
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afaik you need a variety of tests to detect NO3 ? correct me if im wrong, 2 of my weakest subsections in Chemistry is Electrochemistry and cation/anion testing
 

Jumbo Cactuar

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Dreamerish*~ said:
I love NO3. It's soluble in everything.
I hate nitric acid ... it reacts with keratin to dye skin yellow ... and now everyone thinks i am a 24/7 smoker. :rolleyes: :eek: :mad:

'No you've got me all wrong ... it was the nitrating acid!! ... what, you think I'd lie, sMelL mY bReaTHe DamN IT!!!'
 

jamesy_1988

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You can test for nitrates in a test called the brown ring test.

I can't remember exactly how it is done but I know that you use an iron salt and a concentrated acid, probably H2SO4

When I finid out exactly how it is done I'll write back here

Jamesy
 

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