All Sodium, Potassium, and ammonium salts are soluble in water.
- all metal salts are ionic compounds - many salts are soluble in water and are dissociated
Take this as a rule: All group one salts are soluble All nitrates are soluble in water You can answer that with only one rule but better yet the two rules state that LiNO3 ( lithium nitrate) lithium being in group one and nitrates being soluble make LiNO3 soluble in water.
The applicable rules of thumb are: All common nitrates are soluble. All common alkali metal salts are soluble. Applying those two rules, the only thing we're left with is silver chloride, which is insoluble. In fact, the solubility rule for chlorides is "All common chlorides are soluble except silver, mercury (I), and lead."
All salts contain as a cation a metal (or ammonium).
yes, all salts are formed from an acid and a base. More specifically, all salts are made from a metal and a nonmetal.
- all metal salts are ionic compounds - many salts are soluble in water and are dissociated
Yes, ALL pure potassium salts are soluble in water. (Not all of the so-called mixed, complex or dual metal salts)
Many metal sulphides are very insoluble in water but sodium sulphide (Na2S) is a soluble compound.
None it can all be soluble by water
All soluble salts can go in the ground water.
Yes, all ammonium salts are soluble.
Yes all ammonium salts are soluble in water.
Table salt (sodium chloride) is very soluble in water; but not all salts are soluble in water.
All ammonium salts (containing NH4+ ions) are soluble.
Some salts are insoluble in water. All types of sodium chloride are soluble in water.
Generally chlorides are soluble in water. But not all the chlorides: for example the silver chloride, AgCl.
Take this as a rule: All group one salts are soluble All nitrates are soluble in water You can answer that with only one rule but better yet the two rules state that LiNO3 ( lithium nitrate) lithium being in group one and nitrates being soluble make LiNO3 soluble in water.