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1
Reaction Balance Equation Description
(Make sure to place states on the products)
1. Aqueous sodium sulfate is placed
in a beaker containing aqueous
plumbous acetate
2. Butanol (C4H9OH) gas burns
4
53. solid gallium hydride is placed in a
container with N(CH3)3
(trimethylamine) to form
(CH3)3NGaH3
54. Nitrogen gas reacts with solid
calcium carbide to form solid
carbon and CaNCN solid
55. Nitrogen gas reacts with solid
magnesium forms solid
magnesium nitride
56. Aqueous potassium carbonate is
placed in a test tube containing
aqueous barium iodide
57. Aqueous calcium sulfide is placed
in a beaker containing aqueous
mercury(II) nitrate
58. Aqueous magnesium sulfate is
placed in a container of aqueous
barium fluoride
59. Solid calcium carbonate is placed
in a container of nitric acid
60. Aqueous stannous chloride is
placed in an Erlenmeyer flask
containing ammonium nitrate
61. Aqueous sodium hydroxide is
placed in beaker containing
phosphoric acid
62. Aqueous mercury(I) nitrate is
added to a container of aqueous
calcium iodide
63. Potassium sulfite is added to
container of hydroiodic acid
64. Aqueous ammonium dichromate is
placed in a beaker of aqueous
plumbous nitrate
65. Hydrosulfuric acid is added to a
beaker of solid cupric hydroxide
66. Aqueous potassium hydrogen
sulfate is added to aqueous lithium
hydroxide
67. Methanol (CH4OH) gas burns
5
reacted in a beaker
73. Solid calcium hydrogen carbonate
and nitric acid are reacted
74. Solid cupric carbonate
decomposes to form cupric oxide
and carbon dixoxide gas
75. Aqueous calcium nitrate is reacted
with aqueous potassium phosphate
76. Solid potassium metal is reacted
with liquid water to form
potassium hydroxide and
hydrogen gas
77. Solid mercury(II) oxide
decomposes to form liquid
mercury and oxygen gas
78. Aqueous hydrogen peroxide
decomposes to form liquid water
and oxygen gas
79. Platinum(IV) chloride decomposes
to platinum metal and chlorine gas
80. Solid cupric oxide reacts with
carbon dioxide gas to form solid
cupric carbonate
81. Nitric acid is a component of acid
rain that forms when gaseous
nitrogen dioxide pollutant reacts
with gaseous oxygen and liquid
water
82. Aqueous sodium sulfate reacts
with aqueous barium nitrate
83. Aqueous copper(II) nitrate is
poured over a chromium metal
84. Aqueous strontium hydroxide is
reacted with barium acetate
85. Solid zinc metal is placed in a test
tube containing hydrochloric acid
86. Aqueous sodium phosphate is
placed in a beaker containing
aqueous copper(II) sulfate
87. Copper metal is added to a test
tube of silver nitrate
88. Aqueous cupric hydroxide
decomposes solid cupric oxide and
water vapor
89. Aqueous nickel(II) nitrate is added
to a beaker of aqueous sodium
hydroxide
90. Aluminum metal is added to a test
tube containing aqueous zinc
nitrate
91. Aqueous potassium chloride is
added to a beaker of silver nitrate
92. Aqueous cobaltous nitrate is added
to a test tube of aqueous sodium
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carbonate
93. Magnesium metal is added to an
Erlenmeyer flask containing acetic
acid
94. Aqueous ferric chloride is added
to a container of aqueous
ammonium hydroxide
95. Aqueous rubidium hydroxide is
added to a beaker of hydroiodic
acid
96. Aqueous zinc nitrate is added to
lithium chloride
97. Aqueous silver acetate is added to
a beaker of aluminum metal
98. Aqueous lithium chromae is added
to a beaker of gold(III) iodide
99. Aqueous sodium phosphae is
added to a beaker of aqueous
copper(II) sulfate
100. Aqueous zinc sulfate is placed in a
beaker containing aqueous barium
nitrate
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SOLUBILITY RULES FOR IONIC COMPOUNDS
ACTIVITY SERIES FOR METALS (and HYDROGEN)
1. Compounds containing Group IA metals, ammonium,
highest activity Li
acetates and nitrates are all soluble.
K
Ca
2. Most halides (Group 7A - chlorides etc.) are soluble. Na
Exceptions include Ag+1, Pb+2, and Hg2+2 halides. Mg
Al
3. Most sulfates are soluble. Exceptions include Ba+2, Zn Zn+2
Sr+2, Ag+1, Pb+2, and Ca+2 sulfates. Cr Cr+3
Fe Fe+2
4. Most hydroxides insoluble. Exceptions include Cd Cd+2
hydroxides of Group 1A metals, ammonium, Ca+2, Sr+2, Ni Ni+2
and Ba+2. Sn Sn+2
Pb Pb+2
5. Most phosphates, carbonates, chromates, and H2
sulfides are insoluble. Exceptions include those
compounds containing Group 1A metals and Cu Cu+2
ammonium. Ag Ag+1
Hg Hg+2
6. In addition, all acids are soluble! lowest activity Au Au+3