Want this question answered?
By soluble I presume you mean soluble in water and, in that case, the answer is, some are and some are not. For example, Ferric Oxide Fe2O3, usually known as rust, is not soluble in water, whereas Sodium Chloride NaCl, usually known as table salt, is soluble in water.
Nothing happens, all possible salts are very soluble: Potassium and sodium salts are always soluble!
Hydroxide salts from (mainly) alkali and some earth-alkali metals.
KPO4 should be soluble, as most salts containing K are.
When they are the salts of Lead(II)
All alkaline earth metals and their salts are reactive and they have a blue-print that identifies them as an alkaline earth metal but metals exist as metals, and salts as salts, with different structural compounds.
A higher cation charge concentrated on the smaller cations makes it hard to pull apart ionic lattices
All alkaline metals that are added to a hydroxide( OH-) group is soluble. These metals are salts which can dissolve easily.
calcium salts are burning with brick red color
stontluim
Carbonate salts of alkali and alkaline earth metals, under favorable conditions.
Yes, from metals in alkaline- and earth-alkaline metal group (I and II), not salts of the transitional elements and half-metals (Fe, Al, Mn, etc.)
Soluble salts are the halogenides of alkali metals, nitrates, sodium carbonate, sodium sulfate, etc. Soluble salts can contribute to the pollution of water and soils in the case of an accident.
Chromates of Alkali metals are soluble, but most other chromates are insoluble
Strontium
Those salts which can dissolve in water.because water is a solvent and salts are solute.
Because bicarbonate has giant covalent bonds it is soluble in non-polar solvents such as alkaline earth metals but insoluble in polar oils and salts.