What is a nitrate?
Answer:
In inorganic chemistry, a nitrate is a salt of nitric acid with an ion composed of one nitrogen and three oxygen atoms. In organic chemistry, the esters of nitric acid and various alcohols are called nitrates.
NO3
this web will help you understand it better
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/nitrate...
Okay. there more than one answers to this question:
1.a salt or ester of nitric acid, or any compound containing the univalent group –ONO2 or NO3.
2.fertilizer consisting of potassium nitrate or sodium nitrate.
3.cellulose nitrate, a substance used as a film base in the early days of filmmaking.
Hope i helped=).
An oxidized nitrite.
Nitrate is basically a type of salt. It has lots of uses and is largely used in fertilizer industry as the NPK fertiliser.
There are organic and inorganic nitrates and have different uses. A nitrate can be formed after the reaction with HNO3 which is nitric acid and provides the nitrates ions no3-
Nitrates are salts of Nitric acids. They have NO3 radical ###
In inorganic chemistry, a nitrate is a salt of nitric acid with an ion composed of one nitrogen and three oxygen atoms. In organic chemistry the esters of nitric acid and various alcohols are called nitrates.
hello , i wud lik to tell all u guys that nitrate is a negative radical which has a valency of
-1,it consists of nitrogen part and an oxygen part(NO3),it reacts with other elements to form correseponding salts,acid(HNO3),fertilizers(N...
It is costlier than day rates.:)
compound of N.
nitrate ia a compound NO3
Nitrates should not be confused with nitrites (NO2-) the salts of nitrous acid. Organic compounds containing the nitro functional group (which has the same formula and structure as the nitrate ion save that one of the O− atoms is replaced by the R group) are known as nitro compounds.
Nitrates are also a by product of septic systems. Specifically, a naturally occurring chemical that is left after the break down or decomposition of animal or human waste.
The answers post by the user, for information only, FunQA.com does not guarantee the right.
More Questions and Answers: