If in a metal displacement reaction the metal is less reactive than the solution (and so nothing happens), can you write a net ionic equation?
Like full would be
AB(aq) + C(s) ---> AB(aq) + C(s)
OR
is it written as :
AB(aq) + C(s) ---> No reaction ?
full ionic
A+n(aq)B-n(aq) + C(s)---> A+n(aq)B-n(aq) + C(s)
but I can't figure out what the net ionic equation would be since there's no spectator thingies. Does it exist? As in can you write, "does not exist" or just repeat full ionic?
Also, how would you write the half equations of AB and C? Can I write both of them as reduction? Or do they not exist b/c for a reduction to occur, an oxidation must also occur simultaneously?
Like full would be
AB(aq) + C(s) ---> AB(aq) + C(s)
OR
is it written as :
AB(aq) + C(s) ---> No reaction ?
full ionic
A+n(aq)B-n(aq) + C(s)---> A+n(aq)B-n(aq) + C(s)
but I can't figure out what the net ionic equation would be since there's no spectator thingies. Does it exist? As in can you write, "does not exist" or just repeat full ionic?
Also, how would you write the half equations of AB and C? Can I write both of them as reduction? Or do they not exist b/c for a reduction to occur, an oxidation must also occur simultaneously?
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