All Questions
8
questions
-1
votes
1
answer
257
views
Is lead iodide a strong electrolyte?
So, lead iodide is insoluble. I see conflicting answers online. Some say it's a weak electrolyte because it is insoluble, others say it is a strong electrolyte because it is an ionic compound and any ...
0
votes
0
answers
109
views
Comparative Solubility of Double Salts
Is there a tendency that could be used to generally forecast how a double salt might dissolve in aqueous medium compared to the simple salts of its constituents?
Example:
There is metal A, metal B and ...
-7
votes
1
answer
4k
views
Is Phosphate (PO4 3-) solube in water? [closed]
Josh~
Superphosphate is used instead of just phosphate because superphosphate is a compound whereas phosphate is an ion. This means that phosphate must attach itself with a cation in order to give a ...
1
vote
0
answers
47
views
how can I predict the rate of water ions precipitation on a surface?
Consider a titanium pot that contains 1kg water with the following ions:
$[Ca^{2+}]=22000$ ppm, $[Mg^{2+}]=1500$ ppm,$[Sr^{2+}]=791$ ppm,$[Na^{1+}]=48000$ ppm,$[Cl^{1-}]=120000$ ppm,$[SO_4^{2-}]=...
1
vote
1
answer
585
views
Calculating weight of soluble salt in a solution
I got a solution which density is $\pu{1.035 g mL-1}$ and it contains soluble salt $\ce{Ba(NO3)2}$ at concentration of $\pu{0.250 M}$. The teacher is asking from me to "clear" the solution from the $\...
12
votes
3
answers
38k
views
Differentiation between zinc, aluminium, and magnesium ions in solution
If I have three aqueous ionic solutions in which I know that the cation is $\ce{Al^3+}$, $\ce{Mg^2+}$, or $\ce{Zn^2+}$, how do I find out which is which?
I was thinking to add $\ce{OH-}$ in the form ...
3
votes
2
answers
11k
views
Are Na and Cl ions from NaCl in water separate charged particles?
Suppose I pour some sodium chlorine into water. So, what happens is that
$$
\ce{NaCl (s) -> Na+ (aq) + Cl- (aq)}
$$
meaning that the ionic bond between Na and Cl breaks up (correct this far?)
...
28
votes
7
answers
22k
views
Why is silver chloride less soluble than silver nitrate?
Related: Reaction between silver nitrate and aluminum chloride
Experimentally, $\ce{AgCl}$ is insoluble in water, but $\ce{AgNO3}$ is soluble. They're pretty common in a lab (well, $\ce{AgCl}$ is a ...