What happens when you combine silver nitrate with sodium chloride?

1 Answer

The solution will first form a white precipitate, then eventually turn black.

Explanation:

Combining silver nitrate AgNO_3 with sodium chloride NaCl is a double replacement reaction. The positive and negative ions trade places. See the chemical reaction below

Ag^+(aq) + NO_3^(-) (aq) + Na^(+)(aq) + Cl^(-)(aq) -> AgCl(s) + Na^(+)(aq) + NO_3^(-)(aq)

The sodium ion (Na^+) and the nitrate ion (NO_3^(-)) do not react and stay in the solution as spectator ions.

The silver ion Ag^+ combines with the chloride ion Cl^(-) to form insoluble silver chloride (AgCl) which is white; it turns the solution black when the solute is exposed to light.