Ask Question
23 October, 18:58

What mass of kcl is needed to precipitate the silver ions from 15.0 ml of 0.200 m agno3 solution?

+3
Answers (1)
  1. 23 October, 22:31
    0
    This type of reaction occurs in the method of argentometric titration. This methods involves a silver solution that displaces to bond with the chloride ions in the sample to yield the precipitate, Silver Chloride (AgCl). The reaction between Silver Nitrate and the Potassium Chloride yields Silver Chloride and Potassium Nitrate:

    KCl + AgNO₃ → AgCl + KNO₃

    The balanced equation shows 1:1 ratio for all substances. These stoichiometric coefficients are useful in our calculations. Let's compute the moles of AgNO₃:

    0.200 mol AgNO₃/L * (0.015 L) = 0.003 moles of AgNO₃

    Since 1 mole of AgNO₃ is equivalent to 1 mole of KCl, then, it would also need 0.003 moles of KCl. Knowing that the molar mass of KCl is 74.55 g/mol, the mass would be

    0.003 moles * 74.55 g/mol = 0.224 g of KCl
Know the Answer?
Not Sure About the Answer?
Get an answer to your question ✅ “What mass of kcl is needed to precipitate the silver ions from 15.0 ml of 0.200 m agno3 solution? ...” in 📙 Chemistry if there is no answer or all answers are wrong, use a search bar and try to find the answer among similar questions.
Search for Other Answers