Amphoteric
All alkalis are soluble, and this property separates them from bases.
Only hydroxides of alkali metalsare vrey soluble.
No, strong acids and bases are very soluble (will dissociate completely).
It depends on the identity of the base and choice of solvent
Bases are substances that can undergo neutralization reactions with acids. Hydroxides of Group 1 and 2 can be given as examples for bases.
when bases are placed in water, the bases release hydroxyl ions.
No. Not ALL metal hydroxides are strong bases, and not all strong bases are soluble.Only group 2 hydroxides (LiOH, NaOH, KOH, etc) and three group 2 metal hydroxides (CaOH, SrOH, and BaOH) are strong bases.Solubility is determined by how much the substance deionizes in a solution at a given temperature. A soluble substance is considered to be soluble if makes 0.1 M, and insoluble if it's less than 0.0001 M.For example, BaOH is a strong base, and is considered insoluble because less than 1% of it dissolves in water. But the bit that does is a very strong electrolyte.
Acids reacting with bases form salts. Salts may soluble in acids.
Soluble or not soluble, salts are the products of reactions between acids and bases.
A soluble salt and acids and bases.
Bases are oxides and hydroxides of metals which forms salt and water only with acids. Answered by Rajesh
Ksp is only for ionic compounds that can produce a precipitate, thus acids and base can not produce a ppt when mixed together. acids and bases are always soluble.