yes
steel is the example of solid in solid
First, a solid melts, then a liquid evaporates
There is solid proof for thacholy manickoth tharavadu . But no solid proof to proove aromal chekavar was a thiyaa warrior.
Photons are not matter (they dont have mass for example) and can not become either a solid, liquid or gas.
Solid Liquid Gas volume
Agoh is not a color.
Brown
it is a solid because neither silver nor hydroxide are soluble in water
Solid AgOH is not known. It may be in solution but when precipitated you get the oxide, Ag2O A likely decompoition wuld be 2AgOH -> Ag2O + H2O
2AgOH + H2SO4 gives 2H2O + Ag2SO4 (Note Ag has valency 1) 2 mole AgOH gives 1 mole Ag2SO4 2(108+1+16) g AgOH gives 2(108)+32+4(16) g Ag2SO4 250 g AgOH gives 312 g Ag2SO4 x g AgOH gives 25.48 g Ag2SO4 Hence x/250 = 25.48/312 (ratios) Cross multiplying....... 312 x = 250 times 25.48 Hence x = 25.48 times 250/312. x= 20.42g of AgOH to 2 dec.pl.
silver hydroxide
AgNO3 + H2O ---> HNO3 + AgOH
AgNO3 + NaOH = AgOH + NaNO3 The silver hydroxide is an insoluble precipitate but also unstable: 2 AgOH----Ag2O + H2O
AgOH(s) + HBr(aq) = AgBr(s) + H2O(l) NB THis is the classic test for halogens. The AgBr (Silver Bromide) will precipitate out as a creamy yellow solid. NB AgCl = White solid & AgI = Yellow solid.
Chemical formula for AgBr
The chemical formula of silver hydroxide is AgOH
Ag+1 OH-1 ----> these are the ions and their charges AgOH ---> the charges have to add up to zero, so one +1 Ag ion cancels out one -1 hydroxide ion AgOH ---> final formula