yes
Examples are: sodium chloride, potassium chloride, calcium chloride, ammonium chloride, ammonium phosphates, sodium carbonate, sodium sulfate, magnesium sulfate, cooper sulfate, magnesium chloride.
sodium bicarbonate
No. Sodium bicarbonate is NaHCO3, a compound of sodium, hydrogen, carbon, and oxygen. It contains the monatomic sodium ion (Na+) and the polyatomic bicarbonate ion (HCO3-) Ammonium bicarbonate is NH4HCO3, a compound of nitrogen, hydrogen, carbon, and oxygen. It contains the polyatomic ammonium ion (NH4+) and the bicarbonate ion. Due to the acidity of the ammonium ion, ammonium bicarbonate is a less basic than sodium bicarbonate.
Yes. Ammonium sulfate reacts with sodium hydroxide to produce sodium sulfate, ammonia, and water. (NH4)2SO4 + 2NaOH --> Na2SO4 + 2NH3 + 2H2O
nothing
Bicarbonate of soda is sodium bicarbonate or NaHCO3. Ammonium bicarbonate is NH4HCO3 and is less alkaline.
Natron is not an element. It is a mixture of compounds: sodium carbonate decahydrate, sodium bicarbonate, sodium chloride and sodium sulfate.
Yer it does and so does Sodium and Ammonium :)
- potassium chloride - ammonium and calcium nitrate - ammonium and sodium phosphates - ammonium sulfate etc.
sss
sodium sulfate, carbon dioxide, and water
Such a compound does not exist. But what you have there looks like Sodium Ammonium Arsenic Sulfate.