Would you get potassium nitrate and sodium chloride?
No you would not. Try it and see. If you tried it, how would you know? Everything, reactants and products, is soluble in water. You wouldn't be able to find them, in water, they'd exist as ions.
I understand Citric's form complexs with the metals
Yes.
as the metal sulfate dissociates.
No. I mean. yes. i mean, what? Your statement here is irrelevant, to the statement before. So, its not correct. Or is correct in parts, but not strung together. This comes up, from time to time, when people just string buzzwords together. The only helpful thing we can say is, "No" or "Try again."
And I think the sulfates act as a weak base and grab a hydrogen from a water molecule but not 100'percent sure.
Kindly provide a literate source for this statement. It think its wrong, or, like the one before, made up of truths that are non-sequitors.
This is revelant in forming complexed fertilizer solutions.
It is? Dang. I wouldn't have pulled that from the context to this point.
I am asking so I can understand the correct balanced equation of theses reactions.
Interesting. OK. If a reaction doesn't happen, then it can't be balanced. Also, there is no reaction, when you dissolve something, in something else.
But lets work with this. You're forming citrate complexes. What is their structure? How are they formed, from ions, in solution? What is the structure of a complex in general, and citrate complexes in particular?
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coordination_complex