Potassium Nitrate in Water: What Happens?

  • Thread starter Thread starter Kyoma
  • Start date Start date
AI Thread Summary
When potassium ions are added to a solution of nitrate ions and water, the resulting mixture primarily contains solvated ions rather than forming a distinct compound like potassium nitrate unless the solution is concentrated enough to allow for crystallization. In dilute solutions, ions remain separate, and the presence of counter ions is necessary; for example, when mixing nitric acid with potassium hydroxide, potassium ions (K+) and nitrate ions (NO3-) are generated along with water, but the original ions remain present. The reaction between hydroxide ions and hydrogen ions produces water and can affect the solution's acidity or alkalinity based on the relative amounts of each ion. This basic chemistry principle highlights that mixing certain solutions does not lead to explosive reactions but rather predictable outcomes based on ion interactions.
Kyoma
Messages
95
Reaction score
0
If you add potassium ions into a solution of nitrate ions and water, what will happen? Will the final mixture contain potassium nitrate and water or a mixture of potassium, nitrate ions and water molecules? :l
 
Chemistry news on Phys.org
Just solvated ions in a dilute solution. If you make a very concentrad solution they begin to pair up and finally to form crystals.
 
There can't be just nitrate ions and water, there have to be some counter ions, Na+ or H+. Likewise you can't add just potassium ions.
 
Well, I could start with a dilute solution of nitric acid and add KOH and I'd end up with K+ and NO3- and water. Only.
 
Nemus said:
Well, I could start with a dilute solution of nitric acid and add KOH and I'd end up with K+ and NO3- and water. Only.

How is it related to the original question and epenguin comment? Every solution you mention contains ion and counterion, while the OP asked about solution containing ONLY an ion.
 
Nemus said:
Well, I could start with a dilute solution of nitric acid and add KOH and I'd end up with K+ and NO3- and water. Only.

You would end up with K+ but then you are starting off with K+ in the solution you add. You have transferred that many K+ from a bottle to a beaker maybe. Likewise you end up with NO3- and they are the same ones you started off with. The only happening thing when you do this mixture is that the OH- react with the H+ to form H2O. If you add more of the OH- (which = the K+ in the KOH) than there are of H+ (which = the NO3- in the nitric acid) the solution will be alkaline, if you add less it will be acid, there are a thousand calculations on this site about that and variations of it in which students sometimes find some difficulty due to various avoidable confusions. The reaction just mentioned generates some heat which if the solutions are dilute will not be dramatic but might be measurable with a thermometer, I don't know figures offhand.

You took me back to about my first chemistry lesson when after various reactions were finished we asked 'Sir, what happens if you mix that and that?'. 'Nothing' he replied, and then sensing our disappointment added 'It won't explode or anything.'
 
I want to test a humidity sensor with one or more saturated salt solutions. The table salt that I have on hand contains one of two anticaking agents, calcium silicate or sodium aluminosilicate. Will the presence of either of these additives (or iodine for that matter) significantly affect the equilibrium humidity? I searched and all the how-to-do-it guides did not address this question. One research paper I found reported that at 1.5% w/w calcium silicate increased the deliquescent point by...
Back
Top